Get Support From Us - [email protected]
BEST SELLERRM 59.00 Original price was: RM 59.00.RM 49.00Current price is: RM 49.00. Original price was: RM 199.00.Current price is: RM 179.00. Original price was: RM 59.00.Current price is: RM 49.00. Original price was: RM 59.00.Current price is: RM 49.00. Original price was: RM 49.00.Current price is: RM 39.00. Original price was: RM 49.00.Current price is: RM 39.00. Original price was: RM 59.00.Current price is: RM 49.00.
Which products sold the most this month?
Some of the most in-demand products.
The Napoleon of Notting Hill
Last 4 products before the end of the campaign.
10W Nano IP65 Floodlight DC12V
Last 1 products before the end of the campaign.
RGB Controller 12V/24V with remote – 5M
Last 1 products before the end of the campaign.
10W 2ft T8 Combat LED Glass Tube
Last 2 products before the end of the campaign.
IEC GU10 Holder 036
Last 2 products before the end of the campaign.
50W LED 12V IP67 CV Driver
30W LED 24V IP20 CV Driver
Last 5 products before the end of the campaign.
Campaign and non-campaign and best-selling products.
The Napoleon of Notting Hill
$ 9.86
Last 4 products before the end of the campaign.
Price match promise
Safe & secure transaction
Worldwide Shipment More info
Nearly half a century before George Orwell wrote 1984, G.K. Chesterton wrote The Napoleon of Notting Hill, a futurist fantasy also set in 1984. In this startling comic novel, Chesterton conjures up a London neighborhood that has becoime an independent city, fond of pageantry and traditional ways, isolated by high walls from the rest of the world. When its rights and autonomy are threatened by modernizing neighbors, war breaks out. It is a war fought not with astounding new weapons, but with swords and battle-axes. It is oddly prophetic, about large nations swallowing little nations, and local communities struggling to maintain their independence from outside control. It is also a great story, with wonderful dialogue and rich, humorous characters. A comical futurist fantasy, first published in 1904, about a tradition-loving suburban London community of the 1980s at war with its modernizing neighbors. Chesterton’s splendid storytelling gifts and his sympathies for the plight of small nations trying to remain independent are strongly in evidence. 7 illustrations by W. Graham Robertson. New Introduction by Martin Gardner.







