For over thirty years, John Simpson has travelled the world to report on the most significant events of our time. From being punched in the stomach by Harold Wilson on one of his first days as a reporter, to escaping summary execution in Beirut, flying into Teheran with the returning Ayatollah Khomeini, and narrowly avoiding entrapment by a beautiful Czech secret agent, Simpson has had an astonishingly eventful career. In 1989 he witnessed the Tiananmen Square massacre, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of Communism throughout Eastern Europe and, only weeks later, in South Africa, the release of Nelson Mandela. With Simpson's uncanny knack of being in the right place at the right time, this autobiography is a ring-side seat at every major event in recent global history.
'So vivid I could feel my heart beating' Jonathan Mirsky, Spectator
'great stories, sometimes harrowing, sometimes hilarious' Daily Telegraph
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
ISBN: 9780330355667
Number of pages: 576
Weight: 398 g
Dimensions: 197 x 131 x 37 mm
Simpson is an absolutely fantastic storyteller and he has no shortage of stories to tell. Having been at many of the major world events of the second half of this century, the Tiananmen Square massacre, the fall of... More
John Simpson is one of those BBC news men who seems to have been around forever, and according to this book of his he has. He started at the BBC in 1966 in the radio news room, and after a short while, started to... More
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