Archive for the 'Ronald Searle' Category

Searle’s Cats

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Searle's Cats
Ronald Searle

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978 0 285 63731 3
Format HB/PB
£9.99

These wonderful illustrations depict a moggy St Trinians, the circus cat secretly rehearsing ‘Hamlet’, the embarrassed cat discovering that not all cats are the same in the dark… These are just some of the full-colour, affectionate portraits of our feline friends illuminated with Searle’s cuttingly perceptive eye for the human foibles of a cat.

Ronald Searle was born in Cambridge in 1920. He served in the Second World War and was one of the few British prisoners-of-war to survive Changi prison and forced labour on the Burma Railway. He delighted millions with his comic creation of St Trinians, and has been a distinguished contributor to numerous magazines around the world, from ‘The New Yorker’ to ‘Le Monde’.

“The foremost graphic artist of the modern age… I do not personally know of any contemporary who approaches him in versatility, fecundity or the instant identifiability of his line.”
Russell Davies, ‘Independent on Sunday’

“Unique… one of the finest illustrators of the past century.”
Gerald Scarfe, ‘The Independent’

“No home should really be without the great Ronald Searle’s Searle’s Cats.”
Martin Rowson, ‘Independent on Sunday’

“Witty and affectionate illustrations of cats with human foibles… classic and comic.”
‘The Oldie’

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To the Kwai – and Back

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To the Kwai - and Back
Ronald Searle

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978 0 285 63745 0
Format HB/PB
£25.00

In 1939, as an art student, Ronald Searle volunteered for the army, called up in September he embarked for Singapore in 1941. Within a month of his arrival there, he was a prisoner of the Japanese. After fourteen months in a prisoner-of-war camp Ronald Searle was sent north, to a work camp on the Burma Railway. In May 1944 he was sent to the notorious Changi Gaol in Singapore and was one of the few British soldiers to survive imprisonment there.

Throughout his captivity, despite the risk, Ronald Searle made drawings, determined to record his experiences. He drew his fellow prisoners, and their Japanese guards; he sketched the places and people he glimpsed while being moved from camp to camp; he recorded historic moments, the Japanese triumphantly entering Singapore, the planes dropping leaflets that announced the end of the war.

The drawings in this remarkable book were hidden by Searle, and smuggled from place to place, stained with the sweat and dirt of his captivity. They are a record of one man’s war, and are among the most important, and moving, accounts of the Second World War. They document the sacrifice of those who served in the Far East and are testimony to Ronald Searle’s unique talent.

Ronald Searle was born in Cambridge in 1920. He served in the Second World War and was one of the few British prisoners-of-war to survive Changi prison and forced labour on the Burma Railway. He delighted millions with his comic creation of St Trinians, and has been a distinguished contributor to numerous magazines around the world, from ‘The New Yorker’ to ‘Le Monde’.

“This is a monumentally important book… More than just a drawn record of mainly unphotographed events. It is also a hugely moving indictment of man’s inhumanity to man that not even Goya’s The Disasters of War can surpass… This book should never be out of print.”
Peter Brookes, ‘The Times’

“You would have a struggle to name a greater cartoonist of the 20th Century, or, indeed, of any other century… Searle forged his life’s path in comedy rather than tragedy, for those who have been into the deepest, darkest abyss, the only way is up, towards the light.”
Craig Brown, ‘Mail On Sunday’

“To the Kwai – And Back is a handsome, and a moving testimony to the sacrifice involved in the tragedy of war.”
‘Daily Mail’

“As a young soldier, the artist Ronald Searle was imprisoned by the Japanese in conditions of the utmost horror. He never stopped drawing… his art enabled him to endure the unendurable.”
‘Sunday Telegraph’

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Illustrated Winespeak

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Illustrated Winespeak
Ronald Searle

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978 0 285 62592 1
Format HB/PB
£10.99

On its first publication in 1983 this hilarious send-up of winetaster’s jargon was hailed by ‘The Financial Times’ as “one of this year’s bubbling successes”. It has since been constantly reprinted to meet demand and has become a classic of its kind. For all those mystified by the strange pontifications of wine-buffs, this is the perfect guide to the meaning behind “distinctive nose”, “full bodied” and “elegant but lacks backbone”.
 
Ronald Searle is the most acclaimed satirical graphic artist of the twentieth century. He delighted millions with his creation of St Trinians and has published numerous books of caricatures of humans and animals, as well as being a leading contributor to Le Monde’ and ‘Life’ magazine.

“Vintage Ronald Searle, a wicked little offering high in acidity”
‘Observer’

“A mocking and gleefully unreliable pictorial guide to the terminology of winetasting.”
‘The Sunday Times’

“He has lost none of his wonderful skill as a draughtsman and colourist. The book is an onslaught on the pretentious nonsense written and spoken about wine.”
‘Daily Telegraph’

“The ideal gift for any wine lover, any would-be wine buff or anyone else who can see the humour in the sillier aspects of wine-tasting.”
‘What Wine’

“At last – the devious ways of wine writers have been exposed… His interpretations of such apparently innocent phrases as ‘full bodied’ and ‘distinctive nose’ will certainly make you laugh aloud, and in all probability splutter in your wine glass.”
‘Wine Times’

“Comically presents, in his inimitable style, wine-drinkers of all shapes and sizes… These illustrations are definitely worth pondering over with a large glass of pinot noir!”
‘The Oldie’

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Ronald Searle

Ronald Searle



978 0 285 62592 1 The Illustrated Winespeak £10.99 Ronald Searle
978 0 285 63731 3 Searle’s Cats £9.99 Ronald Searle
978 0 285 62945 5 Slightly Foxed But Still Desirable £20.00 Ronald Searle
978 0 285 62765 9 Something in the Cellar £14.99 Ronald Searle
978 0 285 63745 0 To the Kwai – and Back £25.00 Ronald Searle