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    ATLANTIC BOOKS

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    Macrowikinomics

    £22.50 £25.00
    The sequel to the international #1 bestseller, Wikinomics. Wikinomics showed how mass collaboration was changing businesses around the world. MacroWikinomics takes it beyond the boardroom to show how the mass collaboration is revolutionizing the way we live, work, and create.

    Magic Lantern: The Revolution of '89 Witnessed in Warsaw, Budapest, Berlin and Prague

    £9.89 £10.99
    A stunningly evocative eye-witness account of the revolutions that swept Communism from Eastern Europe in 1989, reissued with a new chapter to coincide with the thirtieth anniversary of these epochal events.

    Magpies, Squirrels And Thieves

    £8.09 £8.99
    The rivetingly bizarre stories of the passionate and eccentric Victorian collectors who braved war zones, revolutions, thieves and auction rooms to amass the great collections of nineteenth-century England: 'Yallop's flair for storytelling is evident at every turn.' Scotsman

    Magus of Hay

    £9.89 £10.99
    The twelfth instalment in the Merrily Watkins series: When a man's body is discovered near the picturesque town of Hay-on-Wye, his death appears to be 'unnatural' in every sense. Merrily Watkins is drafted in to investigate.

    Man gone down

    £8.09 £8.99
    An extraordinary debut that tackles race, wealth and family head on as a young black man finds the American Dream dissolving around him.

    Man in the Moss

    £9.89 £10.99
    A standalone supernatural thriller from the author of the chilling Merrily Watkins Mysteries. The discovery of an Iron Age body preserved in the peat bogs surrounding the village of Bridelow is one of the finds of the century...

    Marx's Das Kapital: A Biography

    £7.19 £7.99
    The extraordinary story of one of the most influential books ever written.

    Master Switch

    £9.89 £10.99
    At the heart of this fascinating book is one of the central questions of our age: is the internet a revolutionary innovation that will overthrow the established order, or will it turn out to have been an unruly technology, that will never escape the controlling embrace of corporations and governments? (Guardian)