A Mad World, My Masters: Tales from a Traveller's Life

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John Simpson

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Pages: 464 (Paperback)

ISBN: 0330355678

Pub: Pan Books

Pub date: 2001-09-07

Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 116269

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Editorial Review:


Some people just aren't cut out for the suburbs. As one of the BBC's top foreign 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

Reader Reviews:


5/5 stars

A thoroughly enjoyable and interesting book. (2/2 people found this helpful)

John Simpson's 'Mad World, My Masters' is a superb collection of tales from his travels across the world as a foreign correspondent. The events he has seen and the activities he has participated in are both exciting and very readable. This is an easy going book that nevertheless manages to tackle some complicated issues in a way that all readers can understand, this book is recommended to anyone interested in world affairs or really anyone up for hearing a good story.

3/5 stars

Interesting stories, but a little too much self-satisfaction (1/2 people found this helpful)

There are lots of interesting stories in this book, although not a huge amount to take away from it. Overall, it's a good read that will help pass the time on a long flight. What rather detracts from it all is John Simpson himself. He has every right to feel satisfied with a successful and varied career, but his self-satisfaction comes across with a little too much force nevertheless. Having said that, this is the age of the media personality, and John Simpson has deftly positioned himself as "popular high-brow" on international issues. All credit to him. My fault for buying the book.

5/5 stars

An enlightening account of life and the atrocities of war! (5/5 people found this helpful)

Apart from the fact that John Simpson has been a long time and well regarded journalist for the BBC (mostly political and war correspondence), he has achieved a level of intrigue and pure brilliance in his style of writing for 'A Mad World, My Masters'.

He manages to encapsulate life's realities, the highs, the lows and the grey in-between of everywhere and everyone he has connected with. Although what this book delivers is presented purely from his own individual experiences and through the eyes of a distinguished journalist - I think it's fair to say that his usual diplomatic and charismatic approach to life is portrayed at every opportunity and stops this becoming one mans crusade to save the world.

John's ability to provide real life accounts of a society built around political incompetencies and dictatorships, coupled with his underlying British humour and determination in the face of terrifying adversity, shows us the side of life that most people if they're honest pretend doesn't exist.

A truly recommended read, that will only leave you queuing up for his next title.

3/5 stars

War and Upheaval on Expenses (3/3 people found this helpful)

Simpson, so long the face of BBC foreign reportage, in this book describes his own background as "Wandering Jew meets the Flying Dutchman", meaning both genetically and psychologically. This, however, is a less directly autobiographical study than his other book "Strange Lands, Questionable People"; it might be described as a book of anecdote and travel amid the detritus of war, revolution, famine etc., in other words, the ruin of a house which once stood, that house being mostly that of the European empires destroyed or dismantled since 1945.

The weakness of this book is that Simpson postulates no over-arching plan to "rescue the world", whether by the "development" lobby's way of endless appeasement of the "Third World" governments, the tougher path advocated by the Americans and their academic satraps, or by way of, in effect, re-colonizing the countries and "states" set adrift from 1945 onward. In the end this a TV journalist's book: it conveys the atmosphere, helplessness and unplesantness of a given situation, without feeling the need to put forward any practical, nor ideological, solution. Perhaps Simpson is chary of ideological solutions, whether supposedly final or not.

The book is strong on personal involvement at ground level: Simpson himself manages to help some individuals, especially in places like Sarajevo. He is scathing about those who misuse their power and connections to profit financially or sexually from those negatively affected by the war. He only gets really angry in print, though, by the Red Cross, because of their neutrality during WW2 (he thinks they should have stood up to the German authorities more rigorously). Yet Simpson himself admits being diplomatic with Serb extremists, partly to save his own skin. Goose/gander and pot/kettle?

This would be an excellent book to read on a long journey and is a genuinely good read. One will not take away great thoughts or ideals, though. It is a stream of autobiographical anecdote.

4/5 stars

Great story-telling (1/1 people found this helpful)

As I had expected I would, I really enjoyed this. I haven't read (or listened to) John Simpson's first volume (this being the second), but I don't think it made any difference.

"A Mad World, My Masters", is a collection of accounts of Simpson's experiences whilst reporting from around the world, from Kosovo to Iraq to South America. Each section is told with a great balance of shock, wonder and humour.

Simpson's narration is excellent - he sounds like he really wants you to know what it was like to be doing what he was doing.

I would recommend this to anyone who wants to hear a genuinely interesting story told by a great story-teller.

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Categories

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Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> General
Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English
Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin)
Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback

 

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