

Whole Food Living is a lifestyle publication focusing on whole food plant-based eating. Full of delicious recipes and packed with information, each quarterly release builds into a sound, practical guide to living the plant-based lifestyle. Our food, our health and the environment are critical to our wellbeing. By changing the food we eat, we can improve our health and the health of the planet we live on. Each issue features recovery stories from people determined to improve their health and describes the delicious foods they eat to make this happen. Whole Food Living contains regular think piece articles from doctors, general health professionals and regular writers that dispel the myths around foods we eat and explain what makes it truly nourishing.

Whisky Advocate magazine is the premier source for whisky information, education and entertainment for whisky enthusiasts.

The gateway to the Indian telecom and networking industry, Voice & Data targets large communication users and the telecom industry. The Voice & Data 100th issue is a valuable reference source for communication professionals. The Voice & Data Gold Book is a one-stop-source for telecom products and services for the enterprise.

Vegan Living Magazine is the must have magazine for Vegans! If you are looking for the best Vegan food and recipes, meal plans, diet advice, shopping list, tips, natural remedies and much more, you’ve come to the right place!

Brought to you by world’s top experts in true crime world, the True Crime magazine offers an exclusive and fascinating journey through the criminal mind!

The People’s Friend is a British weekly magazine founded in 1869 and currently published by D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd. Its tagline is “The famous story magazine”. The magazine is principally aimed at older women and is broadly traditionalist in outlook. Each issue contains at least six self-contained short stories and two serials (frequently more), a craft project (usually knitting or sewing) and various factual articles, one of which is a piece on a particular town. Pets, family and traditions are also common themes.

The idea for the Oldie was cooked up 25 years ago by its founding editor, Richard Ingrams, and his much-lamented successor, the late Alexander Chancellor. Their aim was to create a free-thinking, funny magazine, a light-hearted alternative to a press obsessed with youth and celebrity. The Oldie is ageless and timeless, free of retirement advice, crammed with rejuvenating wit, intelligence and delight. With over 100 pages in every issue, The Oldie is packed with funny cartoons and free-thinking and intelligent articles covering a wide range of topics – from gardening and books to travel, arts, entertainment, and so much more.


















