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The Silk Road and Beyond. Ivor WhitallЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Silk Road and Beyond - Ivor Whitall


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      THE SILK ROAD AND BEYOND

Illustration

Illustration

       Treacherous road in Imranli, Central Anatolia, Turkey (1978).

      THE SILK ROAD AND BEYOND

      Ivor Whittall

      Revised and edited by Paul Rowlands

Illustration

       The Silk Road and Beyond

      Old Pond Publishing is an imprint of Fox Chapel Publishers International Ltd.

      Project Team

      Vice President–Content: Christopher Reggio

      Associate Publisher: Sarah Bloxham

      Layout: Keystroke, Neville Lodge, Tettenhall, Wolverhampton

      Photos by the author

      Copyright © 2019 by Ivor Whittall and Fox Chapel Publishers International Ltd.

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Fox Chapel Publishers, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in an acknowledged review.

      Print ISBN 978-1-912158-35-5

      eISBN 978-1-912158-67-6

      A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Illustration

      Fox Chapel Publishing

      903 Square Street

      Mount Joy, PA 17552, U.S.A.

      Fox Chapel Publishers International Ltd.

      7 Danefield Road, Selsey (Chichester)

      West Sussex PO20 9DA, U.K.

       www.oldpond.com

      We are always looking for talented authors. To submit an idea, please send a brief inquiry to [email protected].

      CONTENTS

       Chapter 1 From Small Beginnings

       Chapter 2 Married to the Girl of My Dreams

       Chapter 3 38mph Flat Out!

       Chapter 4 At Last, the Future Beckons

       Chapter 5 Talk About a Vertical Learning Curve!

       Chapter 6 Why Didn’t I Learn German in School?

       Chapter 7 Things are Getting Better

       Chapter 8 Into the Unknown!

       Chapter 9 Turkey, Another World

       Chapter 10 So This is the Desert?

       Chapter 11 A Disaster Averted . . . Just!

       Chapter 12 Job Done, Homeward Bound!

       Chapter 13 Home is Calling

       Chapter 14 Play by the Rules . . . or Else!

       Chapter 15 Aydin, Not Quite the Magician After All!

       Chapter 16 There’s Always Someone that Wants Assistance

       Chapter 17 What a Bloody Fiasco!

       Chapter 18 A Rather Testing Turkish Winter!

       Chapter 19 A New Beginning

       Chapter 20 The End of an Era

       Chapter 21 An Epilogue . . . of Sorts

Illustration

       A long way from my small beginnings — travelling through Austria on my irst trip to Kuwait.

      chapter one

      FROM SMALL BEGINNINGS

      According to my dear old mum, babies that would fit into a pint pot and were born prematurely weren’t always likely to survive in the pre-NHS days of 1946.

      But not me! Here I was, early as usual, bawling my way into this world via Leek maternity home. Ivor, a small baby with a small name.

      While still very young, my family, including my brand new baby sister Patricia, were uprooted to go and live next door to an Ansells pub in Tenford, Staffordshire. The name of the pub still baffles me to this day, The Ship Inn . . . The Ship Inn! For crying out loud, there wasn’t even a culvert near the pub, let alone somewhere to park a boat, and we were at least 100 miles away from the sea.

      As with many working class families in the 1940s and ’50s, life was hard, not that us kids knew it.

      A cold tap and a tin bath filled with hot water boiled on the kitchen stove were the norm. Depending on your seniority and status in the family hierarchy, you might be the last person to ‘enjoy’ the, by now, lukewarm, grimy and less than salubrious bath water. How come Pat was senior to me? An unlit outside toilet that was emptied once a fortnight completed the rosy domestic picture.

      “A cold tap and a tin bath filled with hot water boiled on the kitchen stove were the norm.”

      Then, in 1957 we had a ‘change of fortune’ when Dad was asked if he’d be interested in managing The Ship, as the landlord and 11 of his ‘honest’ tenants had decided to abscond without paying the rent, and to add to the


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