A Mad World, My Masters - John Simpson
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A Mad World, My Masters - John Simpson

Non-Fiction - Biography - ISBN: 330406205

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... He is also one of only two people to have twice been the Royal Televisions Society Journalist of the Year, first in 1991 for his coverage of the Gulf War from Baghdad and again in 2000 for his reporting from Belgrade during the NATO bombing campaign. He has also won 3 BAFTAs, including the ... Read review





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A Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life
Some people just aren't cut out for the suburbs. As one of the BBC's top foreign ... more
correspondents, John Simpson has been at the
epicentre of many of the world's flashpoints for
more than 30 years. Afghanistan, Belgrade, Hong
Kong, Baghdad; you name it, h...
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A Mad World, My Masters A Mad World, My Masters
Some people just aren't cut out for the suburbs. As one of the BBC's top foreign ... more
correspondents, John Simpson has been at the
epicentre of many of the world's flashpoints for
more than 30 years. Afghanistan, Belgrade, Hong
Kong, Baghdad; you name it, he's been there. And
what's more, he hasn't just met the great and the
good, such as Clinton and Blair, he's met the top
bogey men, too. He's had Osama Bin Laden pleading
with some Afghani guerrillas to kill him and his
crew, he's interviewed Emperor Bokassa, Colonel
Gadhafi and Arkan and had close up dealings with
Saddam Hussein. And it goes without saying he was
one of the first people in the entire world to see
in the new millennium on the specially named
Millennium Island, which the Kiribati government
claimed just squeezed inside the international
date line. Small wonder, then, that Simpson is a
source of dozens of good stories. Many of these
have been written up elsewhere in his
autobiographical Strange Places, Questionable
People, but there are plenty left over for this
latest book in which Simpson eschews chronology
and just sticks to some plain old-fashioned story
telling, with sections on villains, spies, icons
etc. Unsurprisingly, Simpson has a journalistic
eye for detail and nuance and never holds back
from telling you the things you want to know; so
when he went to interview Bokassa, he managed to
sneak a look inside his giant deep freeze to see
if there were any human body parts. It sounds
trivial but it isn't; in a strange sort of way the
examination of the contents of a deep freeze can
be every bit as revealing as an hour on a shrink's
couch. Simpson is a genial companion, not much
given to introspection, and the book races
seamlessly from anecdote to anecdote. And yet
underpinning the narrative is Simpson's global
malaise, a feeling that everywhere in the world is
becoming more and more similar and that it's
increasingly hard to find anywhere genuinely wild
and remote. Simpson has been to many of those
places, but the way he describes them makes them
seem fairly similar in their own kind of way.
McDonalds and the Gap may be thin on the ground,
but there are bullets and danger aplenty. To have
been to so many of these places is an achievement
in itself; to have returned unscathed is a minor
miracle; John Simpson has led a charmed life in
more ways than one. --John Crace
£ 4.49

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A Mad World, My Masters (Globe Quartos) - Thomas Middleton A Mad World, My Masters (Globe Quartos) - Thomas Middleton
Pages: 100, Edition: New Ed, Paperback, Nick Hern Books
£ 6.59

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Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life
Some people just aren't cut out for the suburbs. As one of the BBC's top foreign ... more
correspondents, John Simpson has been at the
epicentre of many of the world's flashpoints for
more than 30 years. Afghanistan, Belgrade, Hong
Kong, Baghdad; you name it, he's been there. And
what's more, he hasn't just met the great and the
good, such as Clinton and Blair, he's met the top
bogey men, too. He's had Osama Bin Laden pleading
with some Afghani guerrillas to kill him and his
crew, he's interviewed Emperor Bokassa, Colonel
Gadhafi and Arkan and had close up dealings with
Saddam Hussein. And it goes without saying he was
one of the first people in the entire world to see
in the new millennium on the specially named
Millennium Island, which the Kiribati government
claimed just squeezed inside the international
date line. Small wonder, then, that Simpson is a
source of dozens of good stories. Many of these
have been written up elsewhere in his
autobiographical Strange Places, Questionable
People, but there are plenty left over for this
latest book in which Simpson eschews chronology
and just sticks to some plain old-fashioned story
telling, with sections on villains, spies, icons
etc. Unsurprisingly, Simpson has a journalistic
eye for detail and nuance and never holds back
from telling you the things you want to know; so
when he went to interview Bokassa, he managed to
sneak a look inside his giant deep freeze to see
if there were any human body parts. It sounds
trivial but it isn't; in a strange sort of way the
examination of the contents of a deep freeze can
be every bit as revealing as an hour on a shrink's
couch. Simpson is a genial companion, not much
given to introspection, and the book races
seamlessly from anecdote to anecdote. And yet
underpinning the narrative is Simpson's global
malaise, a feeling that everywhere in the world is
becoming more and more similar and that it's
increasingly hard to find anywhere genuinely wild
and remote. Simpson has been to many of those
places, but the way he describes them makes them
seem fairly similar in their own kind of way.
McDonalds and the Gap may be thin on the ground,
but there are bullets and danger aplenty. To have
been to so many of these places is an achievement
in itself; to have returned unscathed is a minor
miracle; John Simpson has led a charmed life in
more ways than one. --John Crace
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A Mad World, My Masters (Globe Quartos) A Mad World, My Masters (Globe Quartos)
Pages: 100, Edition: New Ed, Paperback, Nick Hern Books
£ 5.75

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A Mad World, My Masters - John Simpson A Mad World, My Masters - John Simpson
Some people just aren't cut out for the suburbs. As one of the BBC's top foreign ... more
correspondents, John Simpson has been at the
epicentre of many of the world's flashpoints for
more than 30 years. Afghanistan, Belgrade, Hong
Kong, Baghdad; you name it, he's been there. And
what's more, he hasn't just met the great and the
good, such as Clinton and Blair, he's met the top
bogey men, too. He's had Osama Bin Laden pleading
with some Afghani guerrillas to kill him and his
crew, he's interviewed Emperor Bokassa, Colonel
Gadhafi and Arkan and had close up dealings with
Saddam Hussein. And it goes without saying he was
one of the first people in the entire world to see
in the new millennium on the specially named
Millennium Island, which the Kiribati government
claimed just squeezed inside the international
date line. Small wonder, then, that Simpson is a
source of dozens of good stories. Many of these
have been written up elsewhere in his
autobiographical Strange Places, Questionable
People, but there are plenty left over for this
latest book in which Simpson eschews chronology
and just sticks to some plain old-fashioned story
telling, with sections on villains, spies, icons
etc. Unsurprisingly, Simpson has a journalistic
eye for detail and nuance and never holds back
from telling you the things you want to know; so
when he went to interview Bokassa, he managed to
sneak a look inside his giant deep freeze to see
if there were any human body parts. It sounds
trivial but it isn't; in a strange sort of way the
examination of the contents of a deep freeze can
be every bit as revealing as an hour on a shrink's
couch. Simpson is a genial companion, not much
given to introspection, and the book races
seamlessly from anecdote to anecdote. And yet
underpinning the narrative is Simpson's global
malaise, a feeling that everywhere in the world is
becoming more and more similar and that it's
increasingly hard to find anywhere genuinely wild
and remote. Simpson has been to many of those
places, but the way he describes them makes them
seem fairly similar in their own kind of way.
McDonalds and the Gap may be thin on the ground,
but there are bullets and danger aplenty. To have
been to so many of these places is an achievement
in itself; to have returned unscathed is a minor
miracle; John Simpson has led a charmed life in
more ways than one. --John Crace
£ 9.99

Postage & Packaging£2.75
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A Mad World, My Masters and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics) - Thomas Middleton A Mad World, My Masters and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics) - Thomas Middleton
Pages: 416, Edition: New Ed, Paperback, Oxford Paperbacks
£ 5.49

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A Mad World, My Masters and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics) A Mad World, My Masters and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics)
Pages: 416, Edition: New Ed, Paperback, Oxford Paperbacks
£ 3.54

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A Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life A Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life
Some people just aren't cut out for the suburbs. As one of the BBC's top foreign ... more
correspondents, John Simpson has been at the
epicentre of many of the world's flashpoints for
more than 30 years. Afghanistan, Belgrade, Hong
Kong, Baghdad; you name it, he's been there. And
what's more, he hasn't just met the great and the
good, such as Clinton and Blair, he's met the top
bogey men, too. He's had Osama Bin Laden pleading
with some Afghani guerrillas to kill him and his
crew, he's interviewed Emperor Bokassa, Colonel
Gadhafi and Arkan and had close up dealings with
Saddam Hussein. And it goes without saying he was
one of the first people in the entire world to see
in the new millennium on the specially named
Millennium Island, which the Kiribati government
claimed just squeezed inside the international
date line. Small wonder, then, that Simpson is a
source of dozens of good stories. Many of these
have been written up elsewhere in his
autobiographical Strange Places, Questionable
People, but there are plenty left over for this
latest book in which Simpson eschews chronology
and just sticks to some plain old-fashioned story
telling, with sections on villains, spies, icons
etc. Unsurprisingly, Simpson has a journalistic
eye for detail and nuance and never holds back
from telling you the things you want to know; so
when he went to interview Bokassa, he managed to
sneak a look inside his giant deep freeze to see
if there were any human body parts. It sounds
trivial but it isn't; in a strange sort of way the
examination of the contents of a deep freeze can
be every bit as revealing as an hour on a shrink's
couch. Simpson is a genial companion, not much
given to introspection, and the book races
seamlessly from anecdote to anecdote. And yet
underpinning the narrative is Simpson's global
malaise, a feeling that everywhere in the world is
becoming more and more similar and that it's
increasingly hard to find anywhere genuinely wild
and remote. Simpson has been to many of those
places, but the way he describes them makes them
seem fairly similar in their own kind of way.
McDonalds and the Gap may be thin on the ground,
but there are bullets and danger aplenty. To have
been to so many of these places is an achievement
in itself; to have returned unscathed is a minor
miracle; John Simpson has led a charmed life in
more ways than one. --John Crace
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Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life - John Simpson Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life - John Simpson
Some people just aren't cut out for the suburbs. As one of the BBC's top foreign ... more
correspondents, John Simpson has been at the
epicentre of many of the world's flashpoints for
more than 30 years. Afghanistan, Belgrade, Hong
Kong, Baghdad; you name it, he's been there. And
what's more, he hasn't just met the great and the
good, such as Clinton and Blair, he's met the top
bogey men, too. He's had Osama Bin Laden pleading
with some Afghani guerrillas to kill him and his
crew, he's interviewed Emperor Bokassa, Colonel
Gadhafi and Arkan and had close up dealings with
Saddam Hussein. And it goes without saying he was
one of the first people in the entire world to see
in the new millennium on the specially named
Millennium Island, which the Kiribati government
claimed just squeezed inside the international
date line. Small wonder, then, that Simpson is a
source of dozens of good stories. Many of these
have been written up elsewhere in his
autobiographical Strange Places, Questionable
People, but there are plenty left over for this
latest book in which Simpson eschews chronology
and just sticks to some plain old-fashioned story
telling, with sections on villains, spies, icons
etc. Unsurprisingly, Simpson has a journalistic
eye for detail and nuance and never holds back
from telling you the things you want to know; so
when he went to interview Bokassa, he managed to
sneak a look inside his giant deep freeze to see
if there were any human body parts. It sounds
trivial but it isn't; in a strange sort of way the
examination of the contents of a deep freeze can
be every bit as revealing as an hour on a shrink's
couch. Simpson is a genial companion, not much
given to introspection, and the book races
seamlessly from anecdote to anecdote. And yet
underpinning the narrative is Simpson's global
malaise, a feeling that everywhere in the world is
becoming more and more similar and that it's
increasingly hard to find anywhere genuinely wild
and remote. Simpson has been to many of those
places, but the way he describes them makes them
seem fairly similar in their own kind of way.
McDonalds and the Gap may be thin on the ground,
but there are bullets and danger aplenty. To have
been to so many of these places is an achievement
in itself; to have returned unscathed is a minor
miracle; John Simpson has led a charmed life in
more ways than one. --John Crace
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Word Play - the John Simpson Collection: Word Play - the John Simpson Collection: "Strange Places, Questionable People" , "A Mad World, My Masters" , "News from No Man's Land" (Wordplay) - John Simpson
Audio CD, Macmillan Digital Audio
£ 16.49

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Would the real Mr Simpson please stand up?
Review of A Mad World, My Masters - John Simpson by smallwren

Advantages: well written, gets you involved, doesn't spend ages on the politics
Disadvantages: You don't want it to finish and you may want to be him!

...he strikes me as being a man who has met hundreds of very interesting people and has seen places that I can only dream of going in daydreams or nightmares. It is not all terrible war stories though, there are parts that will have you laughing out loud such as the interview he did with Colonel Gadhafi in 1998 which the Colonel himself was constantly breaking wind, him and his team crawling past a customs desk on their hands and knees due to lack of ...
...This book is a must read for anyone – I have to admit I am very slack when it comes to current affairs and history but this book isn’t about the wars its about the people he met and the places he has been. The other details: ISBN number: 0-330-35567-8 Book price £7.99 but is on Amazon for £6.39 new and cheaper for used copies. It has been published by Pan Macmilliam books, URL http://www.panmacmillian.com Photos – which are also stunning - are ... Read review

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13.05.2004


A Mad World, My Masters - John Simpson

Main specs

Author: John Simpson

Title: A Mad World, My Masters

Genre: Biography

Type: Non-Fiction

ISBN: 330406205

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