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Peter Mayne

    Peter Mayne, uno scrittore le cui esperienze di vita hanno abbracciato continenti, trovò la sua voce letteraria dopo una carriera diversificata. Viaggiò in India in gioventù, e in seguito prestò servizio al governo pakistano durante un periodo di significativo sconvolgimento. Dimettendosi dal servizio pubblico, si stabilì in Marocco per dedicarsi alla scrittura. Il suo lavoro è profondamente informato dal suo vasto background internazionale e dai suoi singolari incontri con diverse culture e società.

    The Christian Watt Papers
    The Narrow Smile A Journey Back To The North West Frontier
    Year in Marrakesh
    The Narrow Smile
    • The Narrow Smile is a portrait of the Pathan and their highland home on either side of the Pakistan-Afghan frontier. Peter Mayne grew up in India, and later spent four years on the Northwest Frontier during the Second World War. Mayne delighted in the company of these fierce but hospitable highlanders, who were as hard as the mountains that assured their independence but democratic to the point that no man admitted the right of another to lead him. In 1953, Mayne took a long journey to see what had become of his old friends in the high, flower-filled valleys on the roof of the world. But peace had always been a relative concept on this frontier, where Afghanistan was now eyeing Pashtun lands in a new iteration of the Great Game. Mayne's misadventures are sometimes serious, often very funny, and at all times compassionate.

      The Narrow Smile
    • Year in Marrakesh

      • 192pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      "Having learned to appreciate Muslim life while living in Pakistan, Peter Mayne settled down to live in the back streets of Marrakesh in the 1950s. Rather than watch from the shelter of a hotel terrace, he rented rooms, learned the language, made friends, and became embroiled in conspiratorial picnics, hashish-laced dinners and in the enchantments and misunderstandings of the streets, with its festivals, love affairs, potions and gossip." "By turns used, abused and cherished by his neighbors, Mayne wrote their letters for them and captured the essence of their lives in this affectionate and hilarious account."--BOOK JACKET.

      Year in Marrakesh
    • Caught between these covers is the authentic, forthright voice of Christian Watt, servant girl, lady's maid and fishwife. Born in 1833, her working life began in domestic service before the age of nine and ended with her selling her husband's catch from door to door. The tragic death of most of her close male family - her husband, four brothers and her favorite child - drowned by a sudden squall that sunk their boat, robbed her of her sanity. But cared for in the remarkable Cornhill Asylum in Aberdeen, a kindly doctor encouraged her to write her memoirs in pencil. In 1983 this bundle of papers, which included other family documents, was turned into a book by the historian David Fraser, and has been saluted as the Montaillou of Scotland.

      The Christian Watt Papers