Vintage Sunday Times Magazine December 18th 2011

£10.00

Vintage Sunday Times Magazine December 18th 2011

Waugh Zone – Daisy goes into celeb-spotting overdrive after chance encounters with Cheryl Cole, Nigel Havers and Samantha Cameron.

Relative Values Lord Snowdon. photographer, and his son, Viscount Linley, furniture designer, on motorbikes and omelettes

A Life in the Day The actor Sir David Jason on family life and good old-fashioned humour

THE YEAR IN PICTURES
So many revolutions, so little time. It was a year in which the world turned on its axis, lurched wildly in all directions and ended up in a very different place. Throughout the Middle East, small-scale demonstrations soon turned into mass uprisings: in the ensuing civil wars, dictators were toppled and governments collapsed. The Arab spring prompted an extraordinary summer and an uneasy yet hopeful autumn. its effects will last much longer. Europe, too, was in tumult The euro-crisis brought its own summary justice, as Italy and Greece lost their prime ministers. In Britain, however, schadenfreude was ill-advised. The economy seemed shakier than ever and in the summer our own cities burned. But Shane Warne and Liz Hurley, at least. seemed unmoved by what was going on around them

1 in stock

Description

Vintage Sunday Times Magazine December 18th 2011

Waugh Zone – Daisy goes into celeb-spotting overdrive after chance encounters with Cheryl Cole, Nigel Havers and Samantha Cameron.

Relative Values Lord Snowdon. photographer, and his son, Viscount Linley, furniture designer, on motorbikes and omelettes

A Life in the Day The actor Sir David Jason on family life and good old-fashioned humour

THE YEAR IN PICTURES
So many revolutions, so little time. It was a year in which the world turned on its axis, lurched wildly in all directions and ended up in a very different place. Throughout the Middle East, small-scale demonstrations soon turned into mass uprisings: in the ensuing civil wars, dictators were toppled and governments collapsed. The Arab spring prompted an extraordinary summer and an uneasy yet hopeful autumn. its effects will last much longer. Europe, too, was in tumult The euro-crisis brought its own summary justice, as Italy and Greece lost their prime ministers. In Britain, however, schadenfreude was ill-advised. The economy seemed shakier than ever and in the summer our own cities burned. But Shane Warne and Liz Hurley, at least. seemed unmoved by what was going on around them

76 pages. All our magazines are first day issues. This issue is in very good condition for age

Additional information

Weight 200 g
Condition

Good condition