The definitive account of the rise and fall of the ultimate narco, 'El Chapo', from the New York Times reporter whose coverage of his trial went viral.
Tales from before the maximum wage for footballers was abolished in 1961, journalist Jon Henderson captures a time when footballers and fans lived in the same world.
In this timely, insightful and often shocking book, David Hooper, veteran media lawyer, explores how the power of money enables the very wealthy - including Robert Maxwell, Nadhim Zahawi and McDonald's - to crush their critics through SLAPP tactics.
A biography that seeks to unravel the reality from the myths to ask the pertinent question: how long will the institution survive beyond the reign of the current Queen?
Daily Mail columnist John McEntee's life in journalism has been full of encounters with both the famous and infamous. In this lively and amusing memoir, McEntee recalls countless entertaining stories, from an embarrassing encounter with James Callaghan in the gent's toilet of the Savoy Hotel to being fleeced in El Vino by a drunken Kingsley Amis.