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A Garden from a Hundred Packets of Seeds

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James Fenton
A Garden from a Hundred Packets of Seeds



Published by: Notting Hill Editions

80 pages 19 x 12 cm Hardcover

£12.00

It seemed a simple and interesting idea: what plants would you choose if starting a garden from scratch, given that you were only allowed to propagate them from seed? . . . The emphasis is on childish simplicity of approach, and economy of outlay.’ – James Fenton  In this light-hearted essay, James Fenton describes a hundred plants he would choose to grow from seed. Flowers for colour, size, or exotic interest; herbs and meadow flowers; climbing vines and tropical species… Here is a happy, stylish, thought-provoking exercise in good principles, which exudes that rare thing: common-or-garden sense about gardens.


The Society of the Spectacle

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Guy Debord
The Society of the Spectacle



Published by: Notting Hill Editions

151 pages 19 x 12 cm Hardcover

£12.00

Inntroduced by Will Self, translated by Black & Red. The Society of the Spectacle offered in 1967 an eerily accurate prediction of our mediated, image-saturated times. Will Self's introduction beathes fresh life into the original 1970 translation by Black & Red.  ‘It reads – if you will savour a cliché – as fresh as paint. … Never before has Debord’s work seemed quite as relevant as it does now, in the permanent present that he so accurately foretold. Open it, read it, be amazed, pour yourself a glass of supermarket wine – as he would wish – and then forget all about it, which is what the Spectacle wants.’ – Will Self

What Do You Desire? n+1 Anthology (vol.II)

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Christian Lorentzen
What Do You Desire? n+1 Anthology (vol.II)



Published by: Notting Hill Editions

270 pages 19 x 12 cm Hardcover

£12.00

What Do You Desire? The n+1 Anthology - Volume II is a selection from the best of n+1, a Brooklyn-based magazine of politics, literature and culture, founded in 2004 and published thrice yearly. Volume II brings together some of the best essays from the last decade: Emily Witt writes on pornography, Nikil Saval on the birth of the office, A.S. Hamrah on Hollywood and the war on terror, and Philip Connors on working at the Wall Street Journal during 9/11.

Nairn's Town

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Ian Nairn
Nairn's Town



Published by: Notting Hill Editions

242 pages 19 x 12 cm Hardcover

£12.00

A new edition of Britain’s Changing Towns by Ian Nairn (1967), introduced, edited and updated by Owen Hatherley. “These essays show him writing about cities and towns as wholes rather than as collections of individual buildings. In each of them, there are several things happening at once – assessments of historic townscape, capsule reviews of new buildings, attempts to find the specific character of each place…” Sixteen short essays on places as varied as Glasgow and Norwich, Llanidloes and Sheffield, by the finest English architectural writer of the twentieth century.  ‘Nairn invented a way of looking, a way of writing.’ — Jonathan Meades

Issue 4

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Printed Pages
Issue 4



Published by: It's Nice That

76 Printed Pages,  27,5 x 20 cm Softcover

£6.00

The Winter edition of Printed Pages is perhaps our best yet, with a striking cover illustration from Antipodean illustrator Jonathan Zawada housing some truly top content.  We've got interviews with the Hayward Gallery's daring Director Ralph Rugoff discussing his outsider status in London's art scene and Emily King on her career as a design historian. Joe Sacco talks to us about his incredible career in war comics, Jaimie Warren shows us her brilliantly bizarre photography and legendary author Douglas Coupland discusses his time designing magazines in Japan as well as the design references that permeate his fiction.  Elsewhere there's features on the rapidly changing face of Scandinavian product design, an illustrated mix tape from the brilliant Edward Monaghan and a behind-the-scenes look at one of London's finest art-house cinemas; The Renoir. Nathaniel Russel tells us to high-five more cool kids in his Nice feature and Seetal Solanki discusses her turbulent relationship with an ugly set of headphones.

No.4

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Tissue Magazine
No.4



Published by: Uwe Jens Bermeitinger

130 pages 30 x 20 cm Softcover 2013

£16.00

MAJOR LEAK T°4: a very personal interview with OLIVIER ZAHM talking about hating the countryside, discovering photography, making moments, making magazines, and making his first book, DIARY—from which we are lucky enough to be the first ones to show some exclusive images. The 4th issue of TISSUE Magazine features contributions from OLIVIER ZAHM, MARTIN EDER, AYZIT BOSTAN, ADRIAN CRISPIN, MAXIME BALLESTEROS, HART + LËSHKINA, ROTGANZEN, NICO KRIJNO + MIGNONNE VAN EEDEN, ANGGA PRATAMA, MARILI ANDRE, TIM BUENING, BRITTA THIE, LINA GRÜN, MARIANNE MARIC, IVGHENY KOSTHIN, and last but not leaset SASHA KURMAZ of Kiev.

003

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We Are Here Magazine
003



Published by: We Are Here

136 pages 24 x 16,5 cm Softcover 2013

£20.00

Pico Iyer talks about his seminal book Video Night in Kathmandu, Rabi Thapa writes about the cliches that dominate western perceptions of Nepal, Manjushree Thapa recalls how the royal family was killed, Jan Wellman conducts a number of bizarre interviews with Asia's most notorious serial killer, and we profile Thamel, a district like no other.

Issue 11

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Shoppinghour Magazine
Issue 11



Published by: Shoppinghour

31 x 23 cm Softcover 2013 

£6.00

Contributors: Andrew Walker, Benedikt Fischer, Christina Wells, Christopher Rey Pérez, Dora Budor, Emma McIntyre, Eric Ruby, Jonas Mekas, Krzyś Rowiński, Linda Stupart, Maja Cule, Martyna Dakowicz, Matthew Butcher, Neven Allgeier, Nico Krebs, Oliver Gordon, Sarah Heady, Stathis Tsemberlides, Stelios Kallinikou, Taiyo Onorato, Takeaki Yamazaki. Cover image by Stelios Kallinikou. 


Issue 3

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Noble Rot
Issue 3



Published by: Noble Rot

94 pages 21 x 14.5 cm Softcover 2013

£6.00

30 more pages than #2, lots of colour photos and illustrations, not to mention some fantastic articles. Neal Martin, Richard Hemming, Lily Allen and Zucca restaurant’s Sam Harris all feature, and we also have an article from Hugh Jones, the recently crowned 2013 Young Wine Writer of the Year.

Issue 8

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Put A Egg On It
Issue 8



Published by: R&S Media

56 pages 21 x 14 cm Softcover Full Colour on Green Paper

£5.00

Put A Egg On It Issue #8 is bursting with fruit flavor! Kids' favorite food drawings, Jim Pennuci's gorgeous Times Square street photography and an afternoon of making lumpia in Brooklyn photographed by Sarah Keough. Gintare Parulyte explores Luxembourg, Gert Jonkers recommends Hagelslag, Greg Kirkorian comes out at Dunkin' Donuts and Linda Sparrowe fails at fasting. This issue also features comforting family recipes, helpful tips and more!

The Winners

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William Hazlitt Essay Prize 2013
The Winners



Published by: Notting Hill Editions

144 pages 19 x 12 cm Hardcover 

£12.00

In May of this year, Notting Hill Editions announced an annual literary prize for the best essay in the English language, open to anyone in the world, of between 2,000 and 8,000 words, published or unpublished, on any subject. The award is named in honour of William Hazlitt (1778-1830), great master of the miscellaneous essay. Authors of any nationality were eligible, but submissions must have been written originally in English. If already published, the essay must have appeared for the first time in periodical (print or online) rather than book form, between 1 January 2012 and 31 July 2013.  The first prize was awarded to Michael Ignatieff for Raphael Lemkin and Genocide.  The runners up were:  Andrew O’Hagan – Light Entertainment J T Barbarese – Politics 2013 Belle Boggs – The Art of Winning Leslie Jamison – The Empathy Exams Sameer Rahim – The Shadow of the Scroll: Reconstructing Islam’s Origins

Issue 9

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The White Review
Issue 9



Published by: The White Review

169 pages 24 x 16 cm Softcover Colour Offset 2013 

£12.99

Editorial Ordinary Voids by Patrick Langley (Essay) Vladimir Sorokin (Interview) Chess Review Storyboard by Marcel Dzama (Art) Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author James Murphy's Notes on Nicola Morelli Berengo by Francesco Pacifico (tr. Livia Franchini) (Fiction) Poems by Adam Fitzgerald, George Szirtes, Matthew Gregory (Poetry) Dr Gaz by Jeff Keen (Art) Even Pricks by Ed Atkins (Fiction) Gustav Metzger (Interview) Leaving Theories Behind by Enrique Vila-Matas (tr. Rahul Bery) Poems by Gerður Kristný (tr. Victoria Cribb and Sigurður A. Magnússon) (Poetry) Utopia Welcomes You!! by Mark Mulroney (Art) The Drained Pool by Hunter Braithwaite (Essay)

Issue 10

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Shoppinghour Magazine
Issue 10



Published by: Shoppinghour

112 pages 31 x 23 cm Softcover 2013

£6.00

Contributors Alexander Goodson, Amy Pettifer, AND-OR , Audun Mortensen, Brian Roettinger, Chandler McWilliams, Dave Okumu, Gee Vaucher, Hayden White, Human Fiction Tartini, Isabella Martin, Jacek Plewicki, Joe Banks, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Lefty Le Mur, Mandy Kahn, Martyna Dakowicz, Michal Kosakowski, Mikhail Karikis, Mikołaj Tkacz, Minjeong An, Mushon Zer-Aviv, Niall Macdonald, Nico Krijno, Penny Rimbaud, Sam Beste, Sara C Motta

Issue 9

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Shoppinghour Magazine
Issue 9



Published by: Shoppinghour

104 pages 23, 5 x 16,5 cm Softcover Autum 2012

£5.00

Contributors 2ManyPhotographers, Alexey Layfurov, Anat Benzvi, Ava Caradonna, Bernard Farai Matambo, Florian Lunaire, Frans De Waal, Giulio Squillacciotti, Jon Lindblom, Jørgen Leth, Julika Gittner, Katie McCain, Kent Monkman, Martyna Dakowicz, Matthew Stone, Penny Rimbaud, Pooja Rangan, Sasha Kurmaz, Tomaž Šalamun, Vincent J Stoker

Issue 8

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Shoppinghour Magazine
Issue 8



Published by: Shoppinghour

96 pages 23,5 x 16, 5 cm Softcover Spring 2012

£5.00

Contributors Aspen Mays, Clara Terne, Daisuke Takagi, Enrico Fioraso, Hisham Awad, Irena Knezevic, Jonny Briggs, Łukasz Izert, Martyna Dakowicz, Matthew Herbert, Mika Hayashi Ebbesen, Mike Hulme, Nina Sarnelle, Scott Andrew, Seung Pyo Hong, Stathis Tsemberlides, Stuart Lester, Think Work Observe


Palms of the Fog

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Zin Taylor
Palms of the Fog



Published by: Mousse Publishing

Softcover 2013

£10.00

“Here we are, we’ve arrived on an island jungled with palm trees. Soaring thin trunks, crowned with extended leaves, sway in response to the traveling wind.” So begins the new book by Canadian artist Zin Taylor, a recount of the formative power of music, rock bands, record shops, zines and, mostly, fortuitous encounters. The fog, a metaphor for how elusive memory can be, in its in-between state, is “breath made thick,” and the narratives collected by Taylor echo the structure of a generative cycle, “the ecosystem of the jungle.”

Antenne Tote Bag Grey

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Antenne Tote Bag Grey



Published by: Antenne Publishing

100% Cotton Canvas Antenne Books Branded Regular Totebag Grey

£3.00

Antenne Books is a distributor of independent art publishers. Established in London in 2010, Antenne Books distributes publications on art, photography, design, illustration, theory and writing to selected book shops throughout Europe.

Sen/Sen

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Shauba Chang
Sen/Sen



Published by: Waterfall

20,7 x 28,7 cm 60 + 60 pages Colour Offset 

£34.00

A project which composed with a hardcover file folder, a pile of short stories processed in letterpress printing, and a selection of photographs by twenty-eight artists that are corresponded to the texts by Shauba Chang. Limited to 500 copies.

Something Blue

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Jui-Chung Yao
Something Blue



Published by: Waterfall

20 x 28 cm 96 pages Colour Offset Hardcover

£24.00

The greatest myth of history is not about being born then gradually die but the fact that we are constantly experiencing death in its perpetuity. –––– Notes from 1993.8.19 Established Taiwanese artist Jui-Chung Yao selected from a bulk amount of his unpublished black and white photographs taken in the last twenty years, collaborating with independent publishing house Waterfall for the photo book Something Blue. 50 photographs are included in this book, whose bookbinding design, made of artificial leather, is inspired by the vintage photo album. Included in the second part of the book are excerpts from his notebooks, which give readers a glimpse to the artist’s own personal fleeting memories. The sense of loss and evanescence within the missing pages and chapters, on the other hand, is palpable and resonates with those who share similar life experiences.

Invisibile (Cities)

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Waterfall Project
Invisibile (Cities)



Published by: Waterfall

18.5 cm × 24.5 cm 166 pages BW Offset Hardcover

£19.00

Map: words from the editor I wasn’t intend to make a book about cities in the first place, the original open call was titled Black and White. At certain level it means monochrome, and it’s a very minimal way of seeing. So I’d like to try making issue 5 with all the collected works depending on this topic. Everytime I edit waterfall it’s like an unknown journey to explore, I don’t know what’s ahead, but there will be a path to somewhere once I decided to move forward. I looked into these works, many of them are images belong to the cities, views from the streets. Most of them express the feeling in a personal, sentimental way, as I’m dealing my relation to a city. Fine then, I thought, I will puzzle them together to look like a map about cities, even it’s scattered and twisted, for covering the initial idea: a way of seeing. I never take the city as a concrete presence, but a result of comparing. We live (in) it to keep it alive. However, the works featured in this book were only a tiny part from what I’ve collected. Some of familiar landscape of Elephant and Castle, Stockholm or Taipei, a food list while staying in Berlin, the impact of Hong Kong, the conflict, the love affair….or a found postcard in Paris and so on, we just happened to be there then. In the postscript section, there’s project based on the community from the island Tristan da Cunha, it’s to show the concept of city from an opposite angle. In the same section, to back to the initial idea, Hundred Views of Fiction and Mount Rowland both are concerning the issue of seeing. In addition, there’s the Listener’s Manual in the final part of the book as an extended response.Map: words from the editor

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