Animals(Updated) (How to Draw a Manga) by PeterGray Paperback, 32 Pages, Published 2006 by Franklin Watts ISBN-13: 978-0-7496-6637-8, ISBN: 0-7496-6637-4
"Explaining how to find inspiration from everday items and observations and step-by-step instructions to guide from rough sketches through to finished illustrations."
Robots(Updated) (How to Draw a Manga) by PeterGray Paperback, 32 Pages, Published 2006 by Franklin Watts ISBN-13: 978-0-7496-6636-1, ISBN: 0-7496-6636-6
Birmingham War Studies(Updated) The Leadership, Direction and Legitimacy of the RAF Bomber Offensive from Inception To 1945 7 by PeterGray Hardcover, 368 Pages, Published 2012 by Continuum Publishing Corporation ISBN-13: 978-1-4411-3520-9, ISBN: 1-4411-3520-0
"Leadership, Direction and Legitimacy of the RAF Bomber Offensive from Inception to 1945 offers a fresh approach to the debate on the RAF's strategic bomber offensive by using modern strategic leadership theory as an analytical tool to examine the campaign. In particular, it looks at the legality and legitimacy of the offensive and explores the key interfaces between the military leaders, the politicians and allies. It also looks at the ..."
The Organic Horse(Updated) The Natural Management of Horses Explained by PeterGray Paperback, 160 Pages, Published 2002 by David & Charles ISBN-13: 978-0-7153-1401-2, ISBN: 0-7153-1401-7
The Great Irish Famine and Social Class(Updated) Conflicts, Responsibilities, Representations (Reimagining Ireland) by Marguerite Corporaal, PeterGray Paperback, 336 Pages, Published 2019 by Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers ISBN-13: 978-1-78874-166-8, ISBN: 1-78874-166-8
"The sesquicentenary of the Great Irish Famine saw the emergence of seminal, often revisionist, scholarship addressing the impact of the catastrophe on Ireland’s economy (including its relations with Britain) and investigating topics such as the suffering of the rural classes, landlord and tenant relations, Poor Laws and relief operations. The Great Irish Famine and Social Class represents a significant new stage in Irish Famine scholars ..."