Barnaby Phillips is a senior correspondent for Al Jazeera English, which he joined at the time of its launch in 2006. His documentary Burma Boy won the prestigious CINE Golden Eagle Award. Previously, he was for fifteen years a correspondent for the BBC, reporting primarily from Africa. Phillips grew up in Kenya and now lives in London. This is his first book.
'a heroic tale of survival'
*Cotswold Life*
'Remarkable...spellbinding'
*Mail on Sunday*
‘Impressive… Phillips is a confident narrator… a gripping military
history which brings African witnesses to the dying days of the
British Empire out of the shadows’
*TLS*
‘Excellent… such a gripping and valuable contribution to the
literature… fascinating’
*African Arguments*
‘Two young West African soldiers shipped halfway across the world
in 1943 to fight for the British in Burma find themselves abandoned
– wounded, starving and sick – in the unmapped jungle of the
Arakan. Their astonishing adventures are reconstructed here in
gripping detail… A real-life thriller with sobering implications
for the British reader – but I found it impossible to put
down.’
*Hilary Spurling, author of Burying the Bones*
‘Brimming with facts, anecdotes and pathos, this page-turner is a
must-read for anyone interested in military history and Nigeria’s
transformation in the mid-twentieth century.’
*Noo Saro-Wiwa, author of Looking for Transwonderland: Travels
in Nigeria*
‘An enthralling human story of soldiers whose sacrifice has been
too long neglected… This book deserves to become a classic of war
history.’
*Fergal Keane, BBC Foreign Correspondent and author of Road of
Bones*
‘The hard-won victories of the Second World War define British
identity to an extraordinary degree. Phillips illuminates vividly,
through a very human story, how that ostensible struggle between
democracy and fascism was experienced and interpreted by a large
majority of the world’s population. Another Man’s War admirably
complicates and deepens our sense of history.’
*Pankaj Mishra, author of From the Ruins of Empire*
‘A rich story, richly told. An inspiring instance of common human
deceny, handled brilliantly by a writer whose research is as dogged
as his touch is fine.’
*Tim Butcher, author of Blood River and Chasing the
Devil*
‘Another Man’s War is a testament to the kindness of strangers and
the power of memory. Meticulous research is matched by profound
human emotion.’
*Lindsey Hilsum, International Editor, Channel 4 News*
‘Barnaby Phillips has uncovered a tale which touches the world in
every sense. The story is a deceptively simple one, of a lanky boy
who runs away from his dusty Nigerian village to join the British
Army and is left for dead thousands of miles from home in the
Burmese jungle. The miraculous sheltering and survival of Isaac
Fadoyebo not only make an irresistible human drama. They also
illustrate the terrifying global swirl of the conflict. Told with
warmth and colour, this account of a forgotten soldier in a
forgotten army in a forgotten war will not itself be easily
forgotten.’
*Ferdinand Mount, author of The New Few*
‘Dramatic, moving, often shocking, painstakingly researched and
brilliantly told, Another Man’s War is a story the world should
hear, not just so that West Africans may know the part they played
in the Burma campaign and in the Second World War, but so that
Britain and the world knows it too.’
*Aminatta Forna, author of The Hired Man and The Memory
of Love*
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