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Escaping the Ordinary - How a Founder of the SAS Blazed a Trail at the End of Empire (Paperback)
Loot Price: R389
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Escaping the Ordinary - How a Founder of the SAS Blazed a Trail at the End of Empire (Paperback)
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List price R462
Loot Price R389
Discovery Miles 3 890
You Save R73 (16%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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"Gentleman Jim is a special forces hero - and he is one of mine
too." Sir Ranulph Fiennes, OBE The trailblazing sequel to Gentleman
Jim: The Wartime Story of a Founder of the SAS. Following his
death-defying Second World War, Gentleman Jim Almonds would never
settle to an ordinary job. The SAS was disbanded but as a
thirty-year-old Captain, he still hungered for adventure. After
training Emperor Hailie Selassie's Army in Ethiopia, he went as
Second-in-Command of a bandit-chasing outfit in the new 'Wild West'
of Eritrea. He was on active service in so-called peacetime.
Atrocities and killings were common, but British justice was swift
during a race against time as Almonds brought terrorism under
control before the implementation of a United Nations decision to
federate Eritrea with Ethiopia. Meanwhile, he embarked on personal
adventuring and exploration alone in the wilds, rivers and
highlands of Ethiopia, sometimes coming close to death. He was
still the great escaper. The SAS reformed in Malaya and Almonds ran
straight to the battle again. Back with the Regiment, he parachuted
into the jungle to clear communist terrorists out of Malaya. In the
early days of the Malayan Emergency, he improvised insertion
techniques, close quarter combat training and led the long slow
marches out. The success of this British campaign has been largely
unsung - until now. In Singapore, Almonds took time out to design
and hand-build boats in which he and his family sailed around the
Straits of Johor. Another opportunity took him to the Gold Coast as
a Major in the West African Frontier Force. He witnessed
Independence as the British Union Flag was lowered and Ghana was
created. He built a riverboat and navigated the mighty Volta River,
before it was dammed, through dense equatorial jungle from Yeji to
the sea. He even built, by hand (no power tools), a thirty-foot
ocean-going ketch - designed and memorized whilst in an Italian
Prisoner of War camp. He sailed out into the mid-Atlantic and home
to England. He had no modern steering aids, no health and safety
and no radio - yet an uncanny sense of direction. In the dog days
of Empire, the story captures the snapshot detail of the many
countries he visited during his three-month intercontinental
voyage. The account is set in a meticulously researched context,
fully sourced and contains a comprehensive index, maps and
glossaries.
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