Fr. 46.90

A Strange Fish Swimming in a Foreign Sea

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 2 to 3 weeks (title will be printed to order)

Description

Read more










Sierra Leone prior to and post-Independence in the early 1960s, seemed a place of tranquillity to Tim May, just twenty-one years old. He and his companions worked and played hard but Tim was labelled a failure in Freetown, in work and in health and as his manager Mr Enk said, 'I'm sending you to manage Port Loko branch, you will bloody well sink or swim.' It was the time-honoured treatment of a failure in the old Empire.
Management was a daunting prospect, especially without a knowledge of Bank accounting, but Tim faces the future with fatalistic hope. Immature and wracked by personal problems the prospect is bleak, particularly dealing with the wily, cunning mostly Lebanese customers who grubbed a living thousands of miles from their nation's internecine wars. It is not only the customers Tim has to combat, but the climate, diseases and general ill health and his mental state, a strange fish in a foreign sea. It seemed the bugs and creatures, the customers, his fellow expatriates and most of all his real persona all combined to defeat him.
Tim though is a strong fish swimming amongst predators and escapes to fight other.

About the author










I was born male, five days after the outbreak of WW2, September 1939. I suffered a difficult childhood, brought up in a village on the North Downs, the chalk uplands that form a line of hills from Dover to Farnham in Surrey. My village lay due south of the City of London at around 166 metres' elevation, not high by any standard but high enough to be cool in summer and cold in winter. It was high enough, too, for German bombers to fly over at low elevation and high enough for the later V2 'doodlebug' to cross at perhaps just a couple of hundred feet. One passed by my bedroom window at roof height, awakening and terrorising five-year-old me, and obliterated a house converted to flats a mile away, killing 18 innocents. Another blew up in the field opposite, breaking the house windows and shattering tiled roofs. It was not the only war that made life difficult, but a general unhappiness. I wasn't understood, nor did I understand the world about me. On my first day at school, I wanted to play with the girls but was told to play with the boys. Returning home, I asked Mum why I was not dressed in a gymslip like the others. It was only then I discovered I was a boy.
I attended boarding school in Cambridge and then in puberty lost my way as gender dysphoria, unrecognised then-although of course it existed-became an obsession. The vague feelings of dissatisfaction with my life as a boy had become an unbearable preoccupation, and my schoolwork suffered. Once popular at school, I became a loner and would take myself off to hide in a dry ditch, cry, smoke, and burn myself.
I attempted to change gender but at that time, the late 1950s, there was no help or hope of that.
At 18, I joined a bank, Bank of West Africa that no longer exists, and volunteered to work in West Africa. After minimal training at the head office in the City of London, I was sent at just 21 years old to Sierra Leone, thus avoiding National Service in the RAF. I worked two 18-month tours but a total time of three years and three months in Sierra Leone, suffering dengue fever, septicaemia, and a witch doctor's curse.
Thereafter I first worked as a bar manager, then for an American food company and then the Civil Service. I transitioned to become Adrienne finally in 1977. In 2002, I co-wrote with Brian Watts, sadly deceased, a book, 'Wide Skies', a history of the Norfolk and Norwich Art Circle, to which Sir John Arnesby Brown, Sir Alfred Munnings and Edward Seago belonged, all eminent artists of their time, now deceased. The Circle continues to flourish.
At 70 years old, I began writing in earnest, at first publishing on Amazon, having received several rejections from agents and publishers. I am now 83 years old and still tapping the keys.
I was an ardent windsurfer and skier but now play lawn bowls. I live alone with my cat, Milly, in Norfolk. I am as reasonably happy as I deserve to be.
Novels by Adrienne Nash
The Quartet. "Trudi"; ~ "Trudi in Paris"; ~ "Trudi and Simon"; ~ "Trudi without Simon".
"Breakdown".
"Long Journey into Light".
"Castle Murkie".
"The Trials of Sienna Chambers".
"The Cellar"; ~ and sequel, ~ "A Time to be Brave".
"The Mouse Wife".
"A Strange Life". (Autobiography of the Author)
"Tina G."
"To Love and Love Not."
"Coming Out".
"From the Ashes"
"Suddenly this Summer"
the sequel "Prejudice and Sensitivities".
"Holly"
"Lost in the Snow"
"Owning Lili"
"Loyalty"
"The Passing of Little Tough Guy"
"Deliverance"
"Sasha"
"The House of Lies and Secrets"
Social History.
"Wide Skies" by Adrienne May and Brian Watts.

Product details

Authors Adrienne Nash
Publisher Austin Macauley
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 16.08.2024
 
EAN 9781398486577
ISBN 978-1-3984-8657-7
No. of pages 350
Dimensions 161 mm x 240 mm x 23 mm
Weight 690 g
Subjects Non-fiction book > Politics, society, business > Biographies, autobiographies
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > General, dictionaries

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.