Bimbashi McPherson: a life in Egypt
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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: McPherson, Joseph W. 1866-1946 (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: London British Broadcasting Corp. 1983
Ausgabe:1. publ.
Schlagworte:
Beschreibung:Joseph McPherson, a classical scholar with an Oxford degree in Natural Sciences, a linguist, athlete and determined individualist, arrived in Egypt in 1901. He fell in love with the country, its people and customs and stayed there until his death in 1946. During that time he wrote thousands of pages of letters home and this volume presents an edited selection of these. McPherson was a born storyteller. With these letters he takes his place among that select company of writers and diarists who, while itemising their own lives, illumine the history of their times. He started out in Cairo as a teacher, using his holidays to travel all over the Middle East and Asia Minor. The First World War finds him in Gallipoli, clinically observing and brilliantly describing the doomed campaign and then later the Sinai desert at the Battles of Romani and Gaza, encouraging his Egyptian cameleers to charge shouting the war-cry of the McPherson clan. The last episodes of his career make equally enthralling reading, when he became "Mamur Zapt", the Head of the Secret Police in Cairo, hot on the trail of drug dealers, exotic Madames and intriguers in the brothels of Cairo, and the burgeoning Egyptian revolutionaries. As Durrell remarks (in his preface): "there have been many books of political analysis and of gossip but nothing (that I have seen) which bears the authentic stamp of first hand knowledge as this one does
Beschreibung:313 S. zahlr. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
ISBN:0563201347

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