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Welcome to Chester Writer Website, featuring a range of local and national history books
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BRITISH SERIAL KILLERS - PART ONE 
For a large number of human
killers, the reason for their taking another person’s life are often not as
straightforward as the basic need for food, water, shelter, territory, or
the need to reproduce. Rather, most human killers are thought to have been
driven by a variety of reasons, some that society might deem to be
reasonable, such as those who kill in self defence, to those whose motives
are regarded as incomprehensible, such as the spree killer who kills a large
number of his fellow citizens for no apparent reason. Within human society
there are said to be a variety of reasons why individual people kill other
members of their own species, including fear, jealousy, power, love, rage,
intolerance, perversion and greed, in fact the full gamut of human emotion,
as well as just plain and simple psychological impairment.
The first part of a two
part book project, British Serial Killers looks at a number of Britain’s
most infamous murderers, including those who are generally categorised as
being “Spree” killers including the likes of Gordon Frederick Cummins,
Michael Ryan, Thomas Hamilton, and Derrick Bird. Also featured are “Team”
killers such as Amelia Sachs and Annie Walters, Burke and Hare, Brady and
Hindley, Fred and Rosemary West, as well as John Duffy and David Mulcahy.
The final group of killers featured in this first book are those who are
deemed to be “Profit” killers, including the likes of Doctor William Palmer,
Mary Ann Cotton, Amelia Dyer and Jeremy Bamber, all of whom were convicted
of killing family, friends and associates purely for financial gain.
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1. MARINERS, MERCHANTS AND THE MILITARY TOO
Even though modern
political correctness and deliberate revisionism might sometimes regard a
pride in our nations past as a highly negative and backward looking attitude
to take, it is still sometimes hard to believe that less than a hundred
years ago, the relatively small collection of islands that now form the
modern United Kingdom were once at the centre of a global Empire that
extended its reach throughout much of the known world. Reportedly the
largest Empire that has ever existed throughout human history, at its height
the British Empire was reported to have ruled over some four hundred and
fifty millions subjects, a quarter of the world’s population at the
beginning of the 20th century and controlled an estimated
thirteen million square miles of territory, around 25% of the world’s total
land surface.
However, within half a
century of having reached the absolute zenith of its power, much of its
power and prestige, along with virtually all of its larger overseas
possessions were gone and the vast British Empire, which had evolved and
been fought over for well over four hundred years, began to pass into a
collective memory. Perhaps even more sadly, over the past sixty years, even
these national recollections and celebrations of Britain’s glorious past
have been almost entirely expunged from British national life for fear of
being seen as racist, imperialistic or undemocratic, such is the
overwhelming desire for our United Kingdom to be seen as a multi-cultural,
egalitarian and forward looking modern state. Even though Britain’s great
and expansive Empire has long since been consigned to the history books,
even today it continues to divide opinion, with some critics accusing it of
being the root cause of modern day Africa’s political malaise, founders of
the world’s first infamous concentration camp systems and the world’s first
major exploiter of other nations and of the earths vast natural resources.
This five hundred page
project, containing over four hundred images, identifying some of the
notable individuals involved with the rise and fall of the British Empire,
tries to take a balanced view of Britain’s vast imperial possessions, how
they were acquired, how they were lost and their histories, since they
gained independence. The publication attempts to take a specific look at
some of the more troubling aspects of the Empires past, including those
dealing with the Troubles in Ireland, the Transatlantic Slave Trade, the
Indian Subcontinent, the European Scramble for Africa, as well as the
numerous wars and battles that such imperial expansionism created. Written
from a non-academic perspective, this is simply one persons view on the
history of the British Empire, for what that might be worth to other
interested parties, or those with an interest in our country’s imperial
past.
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2. THE
ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF CHESTER
The history of the city of
Chester is so much more than the occupying Roman Legions and the walled
fortress that they built on a sandstone outcrop overlooking the River Dee.
This book tries to investigate the very earliest settlement of the site
prior to the Roman invasion, as well as looking at the various periods of
settlement, notable characters and important events that have helped to
shape the city that stands today.
For well over 1400 years
Chester remained a centre of religious, military and political power, as
well as one of the most pre-eminent trading ports in all of England.
Throughout its history, it has played host to some of the most notable
characters of the age, including the Anglo Saxon King Egbert, William the
Conqueror and the eight Norman Earls who ruled the city and its wider
regions for well over 160 years. The two great Plantagenet monarchs, Henry
III and his militaristic son Edward Longshanks used Chester as their base
for the vicious military campaigns that they waged against the royal Princes
of Wales. The usurper king Henry IV came to Chester to oust the legitimate
monarch Richard II from his throne and it was in the city that the knight
Henry “Hotspur” Percy assembled his rebel army that would later be defeated
at the Battle of Shrewsbury. The city and its people also remained resolute
during the 17th century Civil War siege which witnessed the
bombardment and starvation of Chester’s Royalist defenders in defense of the
ill-fated monarch Charles I who later lost his head.
The past 300 years have not
been so glorious however and a good deal of the ancient city, including its
Norman Castle, has been largely swept away in the rush to create a regional
tourist attraction, often at the cost of the city’s most important
architectural treasures.
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3. BUILDING CHESTER
CALLED “BUILDING
CHESTER”, THIS
NEW PUBLICATION COMPRISES 224 PAGES AND OVER 300 BLACK & WHITE
IMAGES, FEATURING MANY OF THE HISTORIC STREETS, WALKWAYS AND LANDMARK
BUILDINGS THAT FORM PART OF THE ANCIENT CITY. THIS NEW BOOK TRIES TO
IDENTIFY AND EXPLAIN THE EARLIEST HISTORY AND SUBSEQUENT DEVELOPMENT OF MANY
OF CHESTER’S MOST FAMILIAR SITES, INCLUDING ITS FOUR MAIN, MODERN DAY
SHOPPING STREETS AND THE BUILDINGS THAT LINE THEIR ROUTES. THE PUBLICATION
ALSO TRIES TO IDENTIFY SOME OF THE MEN WHO ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR CREATING THE
CITY THAT STANDS TODAY, THE MASONS, BRICKLAYERS AND MORE IMPORTANTLY, THE
ARCHITECTS, WHO HELPED TO CREATE, WHAT IS OFTEN CALLED THE CHESTER “LOOK”.
FEATURING THE LIVES AND WORKS OF SOME OF CHESTER’S MOST PRE-EMINENT
DESIGNERS, SUCH AS JOSEPH TURNER, THOMAS HARRISON, T M PENSON, JOHN DOUGLAS
AND T M LOCKWOOD, THIS BOOK TRIES TO OFFER THE READER A VIEW OF BOTH
CHESTER’S PAST AND ITS PRESENT, IN OTHER WORDS, WHAT STOOD WHERE AND WHEN?
AVAILABLE AS A 224 PAGE PAPERBACK, OR AS A DIGITAL DOWNLOAD, THE NEW
PUBLICATION “BUILDING CHESTER” CAN BE PURCHASED BY FOLLOWING THE LINK SHOWN
BELOW:
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4. IN SEARCH OF CHESTER'S
MEDIEVAL CASTLE
"In Search Of Chester's Medieval Castle" is an e-book looking at the 700
year history of Chester's long since gone Norman Castle which was first
raised by the forces of William the Conqueror in 1069 and swept away some
seven centuries later, to be replaced by the castle complex of Thomas
Harrison which continues to remain in place today.
Constructed in several distinct phases in a little over two centuries, its
development would help to make Chester one of the most heavily defended
city's in all of England and it would serve as a base for some of the
bitterest wars in English history, as both Norman Earl and English King
would try to conquer the native people's and princes of North Wales,
something only finally achieved by the late 13th century.
As castle's generally became unfashionable and susceptible to the modern
weaponry of later times, so Chester's medieval fortress was allowed to
deteriorate, being used for civilian activity rather than as a final
military redoubt. Finally in the 1640's the castle once again served its
primary purpose, as the city became embroiled in the English Civil War and
its ancient defences were called on to protect the civil population, as well
as the Royalist forces of the ill-fated Charles I.
Fashions change however and having served both the crown and city for 700
years the decision was finally made by the authorities to sweep away much of
its ancient precincts and replace them with the grandiose structures which
continue to stand in their place. This book tries to look at the phased
development of Chester's medieval castle, the routine of day to day life
within its walls and some of the more notable events which took place during
its lifetime.
Purchase a copy by following the link below:
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5. TO HOLD BY THE SWORD
The e-book, "To Hold By The Sword" offers a
brief history on each of the successive 8 Norman Earls who held the city of
Chester and its surrounding regions from 1069 through to 1237 when the
Earldom finally reverted to the English crown, where it has remained through
to the present day.
Beginning with the Norman knight Walter de Gerbod, this succession of
noblemen made the city and its inhabitants their own, raising an impressive
number of castle's in the region to help suppress the native people's of Cheshire and the
Welsh borders. Many of these men became pivotal figures in both the military and
political history of England, switching allegiances between competing
candidates for the crown of England, purely for their own enrichment and
empowerment.
The eight individual noblemen include; Walter de Gerbod, Hugh Lupus, Richard
D'Avranches, Ranulph de Meschines, Ranulph de Gernon, Hugh Keveliok, Ranulph
Blundeville and John the Scot. Purchase a copy by following the link below:
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6. SEND HER QUICKLY TO HER
FATE "Send Her
Quickly To Her Fate" is an e-book project looking at the lives, crimes,
trials and ultimately the deaths of the 27 women who were executed by
Britain between 1900 and 1955, including the ten former female camp guards
who were hung for war crimes following the end of World War II.
The individual cases include; Irma Grese, Elizabeth Volkenrath, Juana
Bormann, Louise Masset, Mary Daly, Amelia Sachs, Annie Walters, Ada Chard
Williams, Charlotte Bryant, Dorothea Waddingham, Rhoda Willis, Emily Swann,
Ethel Major, Susan Newell, Louie Calvert, Styllou Christofi, Louisa May
Merrifield, Maggie Allen, Dorothea Binz, Edith Thompson, Ruth Ellis,
Elizabeth Marschall, Greta Boesel, Emma Zimmer, Ruth Closius Neudeck, Vera
Salvequart and Ida Schreiter. Purchase a copy by following the link below:
Order A Printed Copy Of The Book Here
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BULL TERRIER TIMES
COMPILATION The
Bull Terrier Times compilation e-book contains 32 of the very best articles
and 90 + images which have featured in past issues of the Bull Terrier Times
magazine, which was published during the late 1990's and the early years of
the 21st century.
The featured articles cover a variety of subjects which are particularly
relevant to the bull terrier breeds and inevitably include aspects which
relate to the much darker sides of the breed history, which some people
might find disturbing and unsuitable for their own personal tastes.
For those students and enthusiasts that have a realistic understanding of
both the history and nature of the bull terrier breeds, then this
compilation booklet may be of interest to you. Many of the articles have
been sourced from foreign and domestic publications that are no longer in
existence and are generally unavailable in the public domain. A number of
these features have been written by notable figures within the bull terrier
fraternity and who have first hand experience of the dogs, whether they're
at peace or at war.
File Details: 93 Pages in PDF
or DOC Format, 4.62MB
Download Price £5.00 |
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"A POSTCARD
FROM CHESTER" A beautifully
crafted DVD slideshow featuring 100 professionally taken images of the city
of Chester, which includes a large number of the historic and landmark
buildings associated with this ancient city. £5 per copy for individual
customers, including postage and special wholesale rate for resellers.
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