@pumamethod@hermitspeaks11 He absolutely did and he gave nothing to charity. Read Walter Isaacson’s book about him, with which Jobs cooperated. A brilliant innovator but a very unpleasant man.
The paperback of ‘Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York’, updated to cover the extraordinary events of the last six months, comes out next Thursday!
Pre-order here with 50% off. https://t.co/cUBTQ5cl9q
Why didn’t Fergie care about Epstein’s crimes? An exclusive clip looking at what’s in the upcoming paperback of ‘Entitled’ next week. Pre-order here with 50% off! https://t.co/evUuyM7Phq
Given Andrew has been shredding documents since last year, is there a case for perverting the course of justice? Former Head of Royal Protection Dai Davies and I discuss…
Less than a month to go until the release of the ‘Entitled’ paperback with a 10,000 word update containing explosive new revelations about the York family.
Pre-order your copy here with 50% off for those in the UK. https://t.co/yzHEjZfQns
@levelsio I worked in one of the best hotels in my area. Very high prices and undervalued, underpaid staff and largely disappointed and underwhelmed guests.
For example, if China or Russia or US billionaire started UK TV channel called Good News, invested 100s of millions of £, took on a brilliant, charismatic broadcaster as main presenter, & pumped out biased views all day, who would stop them? Not Ofcom. Not Electoral Commission.
Penguin have created the first printed copies of "Weimar: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe". There's still proofreading and a ton of other work to do before publication in May, but I couldn't be more excited to see all that research transformed into a book. This book 👇
This is a bombshell, but it's also an infuriating example of burying the point. It's not until 4,400 words into a 9,000-word piece that we are told that the key stories in one of the most famous science nonfiction books of the 20th century are made up!
Why I’m Suing Simon & Schuster https://t.co/d11Stb7QBC . It is important authors take a stand against this casual behaviour by corporate executives.
The British Library management's response to the hack was woeful from day one. They were more interested in 'nothing to see here' spin than actually fixing things.