Living in post war Paris, San Francisco of the 60s and London of the 70s, Bob Biderman witnessed and participated in the great social and cultural changes of our time, as writer, visual artist and educator.. Richly illustrated with the author's paintings and drawings, Construction/Deconstruction is a personal memoir exploring the responsibility of the artist during periods of social and political turmoil.
ORIGINAL PUBLISHED BY Gollancz in 1988 this is a taut and witty atmospheric thriller and well-observed exploration of San Francisco cafe life in the 1980s, with the enduring refugees of May 68. From the author of A PEOPLE'S HISTORY OF COFFEE AND CAFES. SHORTLISTED FOR THE PLUTO PRIZE for best new crime fiction
Author Bob Biderman and illustrator Cat Webb team up to celebrate the fascinating thought patterns of unusual minds through stories and images, creating a book that's wonderfully inventive, insightful and humorous.
JUBILEE SUMMER, JUNE 1887. Britain is deep in lavish celebration of Empire. That same month, in the East End of London a quiet young man, recently arrived from Warsaw, is accused of murdering an Angel. Two writers at the start of their career - Israel Zangwill, a brilliant Anglo-Jewish novelist, and Margaret Harkness, a fiery social reformer - are brought together in a remarkable encounter as they investigate a crime that would change their lives and their vision of themselves, England and the world. THE STRANGE CASE OF ISRAEL LIPSKI is a brilliant study of London's East End at the turn of the century and a fascinating exploration into a murder case that shook the very foundations of British justice.
Alan a la malchance de grandir en plein maccarthysme dans une famille de juifs communistes. Son père, recherché par le Comité de lutte contre les organisations antipatriotiques, est contraint de disparaître un temps. Le jeune Alan et sa mère vont devoir affronter les difficultés économiques et connaître l’humiliation. Le retour du père ne fera que révéler un peu plus le mal de vivre en Amérique, pourtant le pays de tous les possibles et de toutes les chances. C’est l’époque où les premiers beatniks partent sur les routes, où la contestation gagne l’université de Berkeley. Bob Dylan va bientôt apparaître mais aussi la guerre du Vietnam. Bob Biderman écrit un roman intimiste sur la pauvreté et l’étouffement. A l’horizon, pourtant, un immense espoir : ne plus vivre avec le masque de la soumission. Bob Biderman a passé son enfance à San Francisco et fait ses études à Berkeley ; il s’installe en Angleterre au début des années 1980. Il habite aujourd’hui Cambridge et a monté sa propre maison d’édition, Black Appolo Press, pour échapper aux diktats imposés par les grands groupes d’édition anglais.
Who is Koba? For Morris Kaplan, Koba was a fellow student protester. Left-wing attorney, Rocky Calhoon believes he was a freedom fighter killed in Bolivia. Others think he is still alive and running drugs from South America.
RED DREAMS Set in the political turmoil of McCarthy's America, a young man searches for his father gone into hiding to escape the witch-hunts. Red Dreams is a coming-of-age adventure that leads from the straight-laced provinces of the American Midwest to the anarchy of 50's Hollywood. A compelling story - warm and humorous. LETTERS TO NANETTE From the Beatnik cafes of San Francisco, hanging out with the likes of Ginsberg, to an Army boot camp in Georgia, this novel explores America's entry into Vietnam seen through the eyes of a young man caught up in the madness
He opened the cupboard and stared in disbelief at the emptiness within. There wasn't any coffee left...' So begins this marvellous foray into a wondrous London-based coffee adventure combining literature, fantasy, history and art into a frothy cappuccino. Bob Biderman is a social historian and author of numerous books, both fiction and non-fiction, including A People's History of Coffee and Cafes.
A People's History of Coffee and Cafes is an exploration of how a certain plant became a global commodity, creating fortunes and despair, bringing people together and tearing them apart, playing a staring role in the remarkable awakening of our modern world. The theme is coffee; the venue is the coffeehouse - one of the few places where prince and pauper might meet on equal footing. But where did coffee come from? And how did it get to us? For in the course of a single generation, coffee burst onto the European scene like an Arabian Sirocco without the trumpeting of the media, as we know it, paving the way for a new and wonderful product. Bob Biderman is the founding editor of Cafe Magazine. He has been researching the social history of coffee and cafes since the early 1960s when, as a student at the Univeristy of California, Berkeley, he experienced the first wave of the American espresso revolution. During the 1980s and 90s, he went on to write about the coffee cultures in Paris, Amsterdam and London for various magazines and newspapers. Bob has worked as a writer and lecturer with specific interest in the nature of cities. He is the editor of a series of historical novels focusing on 19th century London and has written numerous books published by Pluto, Walker, Gollancz and Hachette
Book 5 of the Joseph Radkin Investigations series. A young Mixtec Indian from Guatemala follows the trail of tears through Mexico to a migrant camp in the strawberry fields of California. There, instead of refuge, he finds himself accused of murder. Is he the killer or a patsy set up to distract attention from a right wing cult? Mayan Strawberries combines a fascinating anthropological study with the deadly politics of Central America in an exciting thriller by the author of Paper Cuts, Judgment of Death, Strange Inheritance and Genesis Files. Last in the series.
Jubilee Summer, June 1887. Britain is deep in lavish celebration of Empire. That same month, in the East End of London a quiet young man, recently arrived from Warsaw, is accused of murdering an Angel. Two writers at the start of their career are brought together in a remarkable encounter as they investigate a crime that would change their lives and their vision of themselves, England, and the world.
Dumont is a British journalist of French and German extraction assigned to cover the emerging Europe of the 21st century by comparing stories of past and present. This adventure focuses on Amsterdam, where Sacha lived as a young man and where a close friend has been accused of murdering a prostitute.
A STRANGE DISEASE is threatening Cambridge. Is it a new type of virus or does it involve something more sinister? The clock is ticking as famed epidemiologist, Peter Grant, races to find the mysterious toxin and its source before the city succumbs to a serious plague. Alarming as today's headlines,
When an outbreak of Salmonella at San Francisco hospital coincides with a mysterious and deadly explosion at its research laboratory, there is some dangerous detective work to be done.
A young Mixtec Indian from Guatemala follows the trail of tears through Mexico to a migrant camp in the strawberry fields of California. There, instead of refuge, he finds himself accused of murder. Is he the killer or a patsy set up to distract attention from a right wing cult? Radkin is lured into writing a story but finds himself used as bait in a mystery that goes far beyond a small farming town. Mayan Strawberries combines a fascinating anthropological study with the deadly politics of Central America. Final book of the Radkin series and previously unpublished. A Black Apollo original. "It's great to see this delicious series back in print ! What the 'New Crime' genre attempted through books like the Joseph Radkin Investigation Series - recently brought back into print by Black Apollo Mysteries - was to exchange the cheap thrills of macho car chases and hot lead with a world where criminals can be good guys and villains can be ordinary people who betrayed a human trust. In the process we were given insight into dusty corners of history that few of us knew existed!" Oxymandias Magazine "Has a zip and freshness of narration hard to resist ... funny as well." The Guardian "More red herrings than a Moscow fishmonger's" Yorkshire Post "Difficult to put down!" Scotland on Sunday "This is nothing what it seems territory with a few extra twists, mayhem and a cruel message. Formidable!"The Sunday Times
Book 4 of the Joseph Radkin Investigations Series. Investigative journalist Joseph Radkin is sent to Oregon to look into a bitter dispute between the logging industry and environmentalists. When a famed ecologist is killed, coupled with the disappearance of a lumber boss' daughter, Radkin finds himself caught up in a dangerous story that goes far beyond clear-cutting the ancient redwoods. "This is nothing is what it seems territory with a few extra twists, mayhem and a cruel message. Formidable " - The Sunday Times "A truly gripping thriller that packs a message " - Popular Fictions
After the death of his predecessor, investigative journalist Joseph Radkin journeys to London to inquire into two sensational poisoning cases, but he soon realizes that the death of his predecessor may not have been an accident.
Jubilee Summer, June 1887. Britain is deep in lavish celebration of Empire. That same month, in the East End of London a quiet young man, recently arrived from Warsaw, is accused of murdering an Angel. Two writers at the start of their career are brought together in a remarkable encounter as they investigate a crime that would change their lives and their vision of themselves, England, and the world.
Book 5 of the Joseph Radkin Investigations series. A young Mixtec Indian from Guatemala follows the trail of tears through Mexico to a migrant camp in the strawberry fields of California. There, instead of refuge, he finds himself accused of murder. Is he the killer or a patsy set up to distract attention from a right wing cult? Mayan Strawberries combines a fascinating anthropological study with the deadly politics of Central America in an exciting thriller by the author of Paper Cuts, Judgment of Death, Strange Inheritance and Genesis Files. Last in the series.
Who is Koba? For Morris Kaplan, Koba was a fellow student protester. Left-wing attorney, Rocky Calhoon believes he was a freedom fighter killed in Bolivia. Others think he is still alive and running drugs from South America.
Dumont is a British journalist of French and German extraction assigned to cover the emerging Europe of the 21st century by comparing stories of past and present. This adventure focuses on Amsterdam, where Sacha lived as a young man and where a close friend has been accused of murdering a prostitute.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.