Escaping the Ordinary

How a Founder of the SAS Blazed a Trail at the End of Empire

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 18 Jan 2018 | Archive Date 23 Feb 2018

Talking about this book? Use #EscapingTheOrdinary #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!


Description

Little has been written about Britain in the Horn of Africa, Malaya or West Africa. This book recounts wartime unreported military and police operations in those theatres - through the story of one man. He had left school at fourteen with no qualifications but had become a founder of the SAS. 

When 1st SAS disbands in October 1945, thirty-two year-old Captain ‘Gentleman Jim’ Almonds, MM and Bar, Croix de Guerre ‘L’ Detachment, 1st SAS, tries to return to an ordinary civilian job. But after helping found the SAS with David Stirling life as a bobby on the beat lacks a certain excitement. Twice a great escaper, he decides he will never settle for an ordinary job. Re-joining the army, he serves as a military advisor to Emperor Hailie Selassie in the British Military Mission to Ethiopia, before becoming Second-in-Command of the Eritrea Police Field Force – a British paramilitary organization. This unusual bandit-chasing outfit of soldiers and policeman faces a blood-stained race against time to catch terrorists (who feature in ‘Wanted’ posters with prices on their heads) in time for Britain to implement a UN Resolution federating Ethiopia and Eritrea under the Ethiopian Crown. The highly dangerous active service requires all British combatants to be volunteers. Much of the man-hunting is on foot but Almonds also flies around in his private Auster aircraft. During the Malayan Emergency, volunteers again for active service again, re-joining the newly reformed SAS and parachuting into the jungle to clear it of terrorists. 

Britain’s success in clearing Communist terrorists out of Malaya (compared with US bungling in Viet Nam) remains largely unsung. In Singapore and Ghana, he designs and hand-builds boats (no power tools), sailing his 32-foot ketch, out into mid-Atlantic and back to England. The story is set in the dog days of the British Empire, with snap-shot detail of the many countries in which Almonds served and the ports he visited during his three-month sea voyage. 

At a personal level, it reveals more of the enigma of this quiet-spoken Special Forces hero and the kind of family life experienced my brother, my sister and me, as we grew up in an SAS family.

Little has been written about Britain in the Horn of Africa, Malaya or West Africa. This book recounts wartime unreported military and police operations in those theatres - through the story of one...


A Note From the Publisher

Lorna Almonds-Windmill is a former Regular Army Captain, who later had a career in the voluntary sector before becoming a civil servant. She served in Whitehall (DTI and HM Treasury) and in the European Commission in Brussels. In 1999, she won the European Union of Women / IBM Award for European Woman of Achievement (Professional category). The holder of a BA (First Class Honours) in Politics, Philosophy and History from the University of London, she is the daughter of Major ‘Gentleman Jim’ Almonds, whose wartime story she told in Gentleman Jim: The Wartime Story of a Founder of the SAS (Constable HB 2001; Robinson PB 2002; Pen & Sword PB 2011) and A British Achilles: The Story of George, 2nd Earl Jellicoe (Pen & Sword, 2005 in Hardback and in 2008 as Paperback). Lorna Almonds-Windmill comes from a military and SAS family – hence the gradual inclusion of family life from 1953 onwards. Her brother went on to become the Chief of Staff of the SAS.

Lorna Almonds-Windmill is a former Regular Army Captain, who later had a career in the voluntary sector before becoming a civil servant. She served in Whitehall (DTI and HM Treasury) and in the...


Advance Praise

"I commend the author for both the diligence of her research and her determination to ensure that her father's immense gallantry is never forgotten" - Lord Ashcroft KCMG PC

"I commend the author for both the diligence of her research and her determination to ensure that her father's immense gallantry is never forgotten" - Lord Ashcroft KCMG PC


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781788030670
PRICE US$5.99 (USD)

Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

In more than some ways ecstatic to have read this book since I have a particular interest in British Malaya and Singapore.

I must applaud the author for her accessible and engaging prose style, for it did not intimidate or deter a general reader like me despite my lack of knowledge about boats or sailing. I haven’t enjoyed a biography quite so much in a long time! The stories are nothing short of awe-inspiring! Reading this book has been an exhilarating experience for me. Thank you so much!

Was this review helpful?