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  • av Alan Samson
    201,-

    Wars Apart is the cross-forces' World War II love story of Norman and Gwen Samson, as told in a cache of letters made public after 75 years hidden from view. Serving in the Middle East, both had distinguished service records, she with the South African Army, he with the British. Though also British, Gwen enlisted while working in Africa, quickly rising to become personal assistant to the two most senior members of the South African forces, Field Marshal and prime minister Jan Christiaan Smuts and General Francois Henry Theron; Norman was a senior figure in Britain's organisation of troops and transport.Though rarely able to be together, they gained permission to marry in Cairo. Towards war's end, a pregnant Gwen was repatriated to her father's home in Scotland. But when Norman was finally able to follow, the reunion was short-lived. Apparently suffering from post-traumatic stress, a suicide attempt saw him voluntarily committed to an asylum. Apart again. As the letters kept coming, however, each one was indicative of a deep and enduring love. In 1947, the now family of three emigrated to Wellington, New Zealand, where there were more twists to the story.The book is told mostly through the couple's many surviving letters, interspersed with meticulously researched historical context and human stories. It also includes a wide range of historical photos, most from the Samson family collection and not previously published.

  • av Alan Samson
    201,-

    Me. And Me Now is an extraordinary travel memoir about the early 1970s' "hippie trail" across Asia - a story not just of exotic places but an emerging era for the world's youth marked by unprecedented freedoms, escapism and experimentation.Author Alan Samson, a retired journalist and journalism lecturer from New Zealand, was in his early 20s when he began a two-year adventure along the trail, from Singapore to the jungles of Borneo, Bali to Burma, war-torn Cambodia to the majestic Himalayas, spiritual India to hippie-haven Afghanistan. His story captures the essence of the times, the places and the politics, as well as epitomising the "big adventure" for a young foreigner seeking to learn more about the world and, through that, himself.As Vietnam and other regional conflicts escalated into the 1970s, the whole region was on a knife's edge. And with fledgling television exponentially increasing its reach around the world, many of the conflicts began to be noticed in living rooms to an extent that could barely have been imagined even a few years earlier. Unsurprisingly, these years also saw a burgeoning of idealism among the world's youth, they too becoming the news as the cameras focused on enthusiastic anti-war demonstrations as far afield as America, Britain, Australia and New Zealand. Whether Americans dodging compulsory draft call-ups, or numerous others from all over the so-called West taking advantage of personal freedoms emerged out of the "swinging sixties", the result was a mass migration of young travellers. Wandering what became known as the "hippie trail", beginning from the southern hemisphere or the northern, but invariably landing in South and Southeast Asia, many styled themselves as "hippies" or "freaks". Even if they did not label themselves in that manner, their apparent loose lifestyles cemented the perception within astounded local populations.Caught up in the maelstrom, the author pursued the path of the many, tramping war zones, immersing himself in the region's religions, at the same time eating and smoking his way along the trail as far as Afghanistan before sickness had him abruptly homeward bound.For anyone wanting to understand the times and the context of a turbulent but exhilarating era, this articulate, one-man account of search and discovery, is a must read.

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