Childrens Book of The Month August 2025

Trader and his grandpa have combed the beach of Bognor Regis for as long as he can remember, and every time they find a beautiful or special stone, it’s added to their treasure collection.

But when Trader finds a particularly special pebble, he stumbles on a secret that was supposed to be kept for ever. Trader asks his friend Charlotte to help him. Can Trader and Charlotte unravel the mystery of this treasure, and return it to its rightful home?

A lovely sunny seaside story with a hint of mystery.

Signed copies of The Last Pebble are now available now from Stanfords for £7.99

https://www.stanfords.co.uk/the-last-pebble-a-heartwarming-middle-grade-fiction-story-about-a-boy-his-grandad-and-a-mystery-for-boys-and-girls-age-9-10-11-12-by-comedian-alex-horne-creator-and-presenter-of-taskmaster?queryID=49aeebfcfcc00b3c18ec5e875da3db04&objectID=264774&indexName=production_stanfords_store_view_products

Fiction Book of the Month August 2025

Rachel Kushner’s fourth novel, Creation Lake, finds Sadie, a jaded spy, infiltrating a commune of French environmental activists.  As Sadie embeds herself among the activists, she finds herself lost, confronting her past and navigating her future.  Creation Lake is a strikingly original story that is thrilling, funny and thought-provoking. 

Creation Lake is available to purchase from Stanfords for £9.99

https://www.stanfords.co.uk/creation-lake-from-the-booker-prize-shortlisted-author

Non Fiction Book of The Month August 2025

Small Earthquakes by Shafik Meghji

Small Earthquakes uncovers the fascinating story of Britain’s forgotten connections with South America, from the Atacama Desert to Tierra del Fuego, Easter Island to South Georgia. By blending travel writing, history and reportage author Shafik Meghji tells a tale of footballers and pirates, nitrate kings and wool barons, polar explorers and cowboys, missionaries and radical MPs.

He sheds light on Britain’s impact on Argentina, Chile and Uruguay, from sparking wars, forging national identities and redrawing borders to its tangled role in their colonisation and decolonisation. But it also reveals how these countries, in turn, have shaped Britain in profound and unexpected ways, from Fray Bentos to the Falklands.

Small Earthquakes is available now from Stanfords for £25.00

https://www.stanfords.co.uk/small-earthquakes-a-journey-through-lost-british-history-in-south-america

Book of the Month: A Training School for Elephants

Our Book of the Month for March is A Training School for Elephants by Sophy Roberts.

From the 2020 Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year shortlisted author of The Lost Pianos of Siberia, Sophy Roberts takes us on a new journey, following four 19th century elephants marched from the East African coast towards Congo, to tell a heartbreaking story of folly and colonial greed.

Sophy Roberts brings history to life, tackling difficult, sensitive subjects with careful, exquisite prose.

In 1879, King Leopold II of Belgium launched an ambitious plan to plunder Africa’s resources. The key to cracking open the continent, or so he thought, was its elephants — if only he could train them.

And so he commissioned the charismatic Irish adventurer Frederick Carter to ship four tamed Asian elephants from India to the East African coast, where they were marched inland towards Congo. The ultimate aim was to establish a training school for African elephants. 

Following in the footsteps of the four elephants, Roberts pieces together the story of this long-forgotten expedition, in travels that take her to Belgium, Iraq, India, Tanzania and Congo.

The storytelling brings to life a compelling cast of historic characters and modern voices, from ivory dealers to Catholic nuns, set against rich descriptions of the landscapes travelled. Roberts digs deep into historic records to reckon with our broken relationship with animals, revealing an extraordinary — and enduring — story of colonial greed, ineptitude, hypocrisy and folly. 

A Training School for Elephants is available now for £22

Journey to the Carpathian Mountains with Nick Thorpe

In this guest blog post, Nick Thorpe, the author of our Book of the Month, Walking Europe’s Last Wilderness, reflects on his journey through the Carpathian Mountains and how it reshaped his understanding of wilderness and rewilding.

-by Nick Thorpe

‘You can drive out nature with a pitchfork…’ sang Tom Waits, ‘but it always comes roaring back…’ I thought of that line as I discussed the title for my new book with my editors at Yale University Press. Walking the Carpathians for my book changed my understanding of both wilderness and ‘re-wilding’. My book is a meditation on both, and on our relationship as locals and visitors to what is still wild in the landscape, and inside ourselves. I realised that what is ‘wild’ is contracting and expanding all the time, even in a world overwhelmed by spurts of news about machine-learning posing as intelligence. While we in the mountains are sometimes tempted to anthropomorphise animals and plants, we in the cities have already fallen into the trap of anthropomorphising machines. Bear intelligence dwarfs artificial intelligence. Whatever our differences or divisions, we’re all in this together. 

Continue reading Journey to the Carpathian Mountains with Nick Thorpe

Book of the Month: Walking Europe’s Last Wilderness

Our Book of the Month for February is Walking Europe’s Last Wilderness: A Journey through the Carpathian Mountains by Nick Thorpe.

An evocative voyage through the Carpathian mountain range and its threatened landscape, peoples, and history.


The Carpathian Mountains of Poland, Slovakia, Romania, and Ukraine are Europe’s last true wilderness. A landscape of great spruce and beech forests, grass meadows, and ancient villages, its people contend daily with the elements—as well as Europe’s last large carnivores. But this fragile ecosystem is now under threat, from climate change and illegal logging. 

Continue reading Book of the Month: Walking Europe’s Last Wilderness

Book of the Month: Return to Sri Lanka

Our first Book of the Month for 2025 is Return to Sri Lanka by Razeen Sally.

A blend of travel writing, memoir, history and current affairs that tells the story of Sri Lanka. A perfect read for first-time visitors, Sri Lankans abroad or at home, or anyone looking to deepen their understanding of one of the world’s most fascinating and paradoxical countries.

Continue reading Book of the Month: Return to Sri Lanka

Book of the Month: Prisoners of Geography The Quiz Book

What a great year in Books of the Month we’ve had. It seemed fitting that our final Book of the Month for 2024 was one of our favourite authors with a book that would make a great gift. Our Book of the Month for December is Tim Marshall’s Prisoners of Geography The Quiz Book.

Do you know your continents from your countries, your landmarks from your latitudes, your mountain ranges from your rivers? Put your geographical and political knowledge to the test and discover your geography IQ with bestselling geopolitical author Tim Marshall. 

Continue reading Book of the Month: Prisoners of Geography The Quiz Book

Book of the Month: Brilliant Maps in the Wild

Our Book of the Month for November is Brilliant Maps in the Wild: A Nature Atlas edited by Mike Higgins, illustrated by Manuel Bortoletti.

From the publishers of Brilliant Maps, here is a cartographic journey through our planet’s weirdest and most wonderful phenomena.

Continue reading Book of the Month: Brilliant Maps in the Wild

Book of the Month: Myths of Geography

Our Book of the Month for October is Myths of Geography: Eight Ways We Get the World Wrong by Paul Richardson.

Is geography really destiny? Our maps may no longer be stalked by dragons and monsters, but our perceptions of the world are still shaped by geographic myths. Myths like Europe being the centre of the world. Or that border walls are the solution to migration. Or that Russia is predestined to threaten its neighbours. 

Continue reading Book of the Month: Myths of Geography