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Books > Biography
A powerful and authentic account of one soldier's war from Tobruk to
Arnhem and all points in between.
John Humphreys was just a boy soldier in the Royal Engineers when war
was declared in 1939. By the war's end he had jumped into Arnhem with
the Parachute Regiment to spearhead the attack on the bridge. For days
Humphreys and the rest of his squad held on, outnumbered and outgunned
by the German army fighting to the last bullet and refusing to
surrender.
But the Bridge Too Far is only the climax of Humphreys’ remarkable war.
Twice captured as a prisoner of war, he twice escaped from the enemy to
make his way back to Allied lines in order to rejoin the fight.
Aged 101, Humphreys began to pen his extraordinary story, with the help
of bestselling author and former paratrooper Stuart Tootal. The Last
Para is Humphrey’s parting gift, and the final time we will read an
account from a soldier of our Greatest Generation bearing witness to
the heroism and sacrifice of this legendary action – told with
incredible honesty and irrepressible spirit.
For much of his half-century career in the House of Commons, Tony
Benn has been the most loved and loathed man in British politics.
He has been idolized by the left, and reviled with equal measure by
the Westminster establishment, not least by New Labour. Once tipped
to lead the Labour Party, Benn's growing disillusionment with what
he regarded as the democratic deficit infecting politics,
reinforced his resolve to continue playing the role he valued most,
as a good House of Commons Man.David Powell's fascinating new
biography traces Tony Benn's extraordinary fifty year political
career from the day he first entered the House in 1950. He argues
that Benn's commitment to the House of Commons was fortified by his
experiences during the thirty months when he fought to renounce his
peerage and remain an MP; then during the twelve years he spent in
government, and finally during the two decades he spent on the back
benches, having been defeated in the bruising campaign for the
Deputy Leadership of the Labour Party. Each was to provide him with
an insight into the workings of power and cumulatively they were to
convince him of the charade that passed for democracy not only in
Westminster and in the Labour Party, but in the European Union and
in the wider in the global context, with democratic ideals
subordinated to the political and economic power of the United
States. Benn has always a controversial figure. He was widely
caricatured as Bogey Benn by the Tories during the 1970s and was
more recently anathematised by Tony Blair as the man who almost
knocked the Labour party over the edge of the cliff into
extinction. Nonetheless many of the policies he championed, and for
which he was widely belittled, have since entered the statute
books. Indeed, if history is a chronicle of ironies, there can have
been little more ironic than when, following Benn's valedictory
speech in the Commons in 2001, a Tory backbencher commended him to
fellow MPs as Britain's greatest living Parliamentarian.
Xoliswa Nduneni-Ngema loved the theatre and dreamed of being an actress. She soon discovered that acting wasn't for her – managing productions was. She meets rising-star, Mbongeni Ngema and they marry. As his success grows, they start a company that births the hit Sarafina! But beneath the stardom, Xoliswa experiences constant abuse. With Fred Khumalo, she tells her powerful story.
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