THE ULTIMATE SURVIVAL GUIDE for anyone who thinks they'd survive the world's most hostile environments - or at least imagine they could do.
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First issued to British airmen in the 1950s the beautifully illustrated Air Ministry Survival Guide provides invaluable practical tips and instruction on how to keep calm and carry on in any hostile environment.
Whether you're lost in the desert, arctic, jungle, or adrift on the open ocean, you'll be better off armed with sensible advice on how to:
- Build a structurally sound igloo
- Pull faces to prevent frostbite (and when to expect bits to fall off should you fail)
- Fashion a mask to prevent snowblindness
- Make a hat out of seat cushions
- Behave in the event of meeting hostile locals
- Stay safe from poisonous reptiles and insects
- Use a 'fire thong'
- Punch man-eating sharks (which are cowards)
An exciting plot and a swarthy, wonderfully attractive main character... exciting, heady stuff
—— Globe and MailThrough the eyes of likeable rogue Lawrence Beaumont, Letemendia vividly re-creates the dark world of deceit, distrust and political intrigue which heralds the start of the English Civil War
—— Michael Arnold, author of Traitor's BloodA fiendish plot, full of intrigue and violence, and a richness and depth rare in historical fiction - I loved it
—— Ben KaneI thoroughly enjoyed it. It's a brilliant read... My only complaint is that I've now got to wait for the next installment!
—— Susanna GregoryConspiracy, passion and treason in the English Civil War
—— Woman & HomeA lively and beautifully engineered biography
—— John BanvillePhilipps… is punchy and hard-nosed in his handling of facts, but pliant, imaginative and humane in his understanding of motives and emotions
—— Richard Davenport-Hines , GuardianFresh and thought-provoking throughout... rich in archive material
—— Giles Udy , The TimesA cracking story... An impressively researched and smoothly polished debut... persuasive.. [an] excellent book
—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday TimesA masterpiece. The rich renderings of secret assignations, smuggled documents, damning intelligence and brilliant code-breaking will delight lovers of fiction and non-fiction alike. Picture Erik Larson meets John le Carré and you have only begun to scratch the surface of this absolutely gripping book.
—— Brad Thor, author of international bestseller SPYMASTERAn adroit, deeply researched and richly embroidered portrait of Maclean
—— Ferdinand Mount , ProspectHugely impressive – by an historian who is a master of storytelling and empathy. A rare combination.
—— Dame Carmen CallilWhat great storytelling. Maclean may have been a traitor but his slow slide to self-destruction has all the elements of tragedy. I couldn’t put it down.
—— Peter SnowDonald Maclean was arguably the most valuable, and certainly the most troubled, of the Cambridge spies. Roland Philipps knows the world that formed him and has given us the fullest account we've yet had not only of his treason but of the conflicted man who committed it.
—— Joseph Kanon, author of DEFECTORSGripping from start to finish
—— Sara Wheeler, author of O MY AMERICA!Magisterial. The biography of Maclean we have all been waiting for
—— Charles Cumming, author of the Thomas Kell seriesAdmirable… [a] compassionate, absorbing book
—— Miranda Carter , The Oldie[A] persuasive and polished biography
—— Sunday TimesRoland Philipps illuminates, in both broad and subtle strokes
—— John Lloyd , Financial TimesPhilipps does an admirable job of piecing together the spy’s tale
—— Mary Jo Murphy , Washington Post SundayPhilipps’s telling of the tale is masterly. He weaves a complex web of professional, psychological and marital themes into a wonderful fluent, coherent and compelling narrative
—— Xan Smiley , StandpointElegant, thorough and surprisingly exciting
—— Marcus Berkman , Daily Mail[A] superbly told tale
—— Daily Mail , Daily Mail, **Books of the Year**In A Spy Named Orphan Roland Philipps’s description of Donald Maclean’s psychological make-up chimes with what I have always felt about the Cambridge spies (Philby excepted) – namely, that their romance with the Soviet Union partook of patriotism as much as it did of espionage… Philipps makes the story and the slow uncovering of his treachery a gripping narrative and an overwhelmingly sad one
—— Alan Bennett , London Review of Books