1. Winter - Len Deighton - 7/10
2. The Last Great Mountain - Mick Conefrey - 6/10
3. Pegasus Bridge - Stephen E. Ambrose - 6/10
4. The Dead of Jericho - Colin Dexter - 7/10
5. Agent Sonya - Ben MacIntyre - 7/10
6. The Book Thief - Markus Zusak - 9/10
7. Macbeth - A. J. Hartley and David Hewson - 9/10
8. The Ashes of London - Andrew Taylor - 7/10
9. Ashendon - W. Somerset Maugham - 5/10
10. With a Mind to Kill - Anthony Horowitz - 8/10
11. SAS: Sea King Down - Mark Aston and Stuart Tootal - 7/10
12. SS-GB - Len Deighton - 6/10
13. Nomad - Alan Partridge - 5/10
14. Jungle Soldier - Brian Moynahan - 9/10
This is a true story about Freddy Spencer Chapman, an adventurer. Chapman lost his mother when he was young. She left a financial legacy to pay for Chapman's schooling and he was educated at Sedbergh School and Cambridge University. His father was killed in WW1 whilst he was still at school. His schooling was harsh and he became a bit of a loner.
Ok leaving university, Chapman went on numerous expeditions to Greenland and later Tibet, where he mastered his survival skills and techniques that were to later serve him well when in the Malayan jungle. He was a keen naturalist.
During WW2, Chapman was posted to train Australian and New Zealand soldiers survival and guerrilla warfare techniques in Japanese occupied Malaya. He ended up behind enemy lines, eventually cut off from the main forces. The book tells how he joined up with Malayan freedom fighters, Chinese fighters, other lost allied soldiers and others, to survive three years in the jungle, despite constantly being hunted by the Japanese.
Chapman recorded his exploits in diaries, but there were lost twice and only his final diaries survived the war. He wrote about the jungle after the war, and this book draws heavily on the diaries and Chapman's book - "The Jungle is Neutral". There are discrepancies between the two versions though, as the writer points out.
An fascinating account of an adventurous life.